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View in a Room ArtworkView in a Room Background
large scale framed oil ready to hang.

She appears to be taking a self portrait but she's actually looking for more bars. She's looking for a connection as we so often are. Since the advent of the mobile phone we have become increasingly attached to them and "connectivity" they represent; looking for messages from friends and family, checking the news and weather and stock and art markets to see how we are doing. We draw and read books on our phones. listen to voicemails, music and guided meditations. We shoot oodles of photos often at the expense of the actual experience we are having.
All that said, this painting is only about these phenomena in part. My approach to narrative is to show signs of meaning which are willing to be apprehended and deciphered yet are intentionally misleading and evasive in favor of preventing a single conclusion. Like fragments of a dream leading the waking mind down a garden path of clues which vanish as quickly as they appear. The girl turns away from us veiling her identity behind a curtain of hair to look at her phone and remain involved in her interior life instead of engaging with the exterior world. Outside of her purview a mother and daughter look at a monumentally scaled painting. Their 'realness' is dwarfed by the giant illusion of her interiority. We see them from behind and their identities are also veiled by their backs being turned to us. We witness them considering the female gaze. They connect by holding hands and are halated objectively as the girl is metaphorically. What are they all thinking?
large scale framed oil ready to hang.

She appears to be taking a self portrait but she's actually looking for more bars. She's looking for a connection as we so often are. Since the advent of the mobile phone we have become increasingly attached to them and "connectivity" they represent; looking for messages from friends and family, checking the news and weather and stock and art markets to see how we are doing. We draw and read books on our phones. listen to voicemails, music and guided meditations. We shoot oodles of photos often at the expense of the actual experience we are having.
All that said, this painting is only about these phenomena in part. My approach to narrative is to show signs of meaning which are willing to be apprehended and deciphered yet are intentionally misleading and evasive in favor of preventing a single conclusion. Like fragments of a dream leading the waking mind down a garden path of clues which vanish as quickly as they appear. The girl turns away from us veiling her identity behind a curtain of hair to look at her phone and remain involved in her interior life instead of engaging with the exterior world. Outside of her purview a mother and daughter look at a monumentally scaled painting. Their 'realness' is dwarfed by the giant illusion of her interiority. We see them from behind and their identities are also veiled by their backs being turned to us. We witness them considering the female gaze. They connect by holding hands and are halated objectively as the girl is metaphorically. What are they all thinking?
studio September 21, 2020 Brooklyn, New York
large scale framed oil ready to hang.

She appears to be taking a self portrait but she's actually looking for more bars. She's looking for a connection as we so often are. Since the advent of the mobile phone we have become increasingly attached to them and "connectivity" they represent; looking for messages from friends and family, checking the news and weather and stock and art markets to see how we are doing. We draw and read books on our phones. listen to voicemails, music and guided meditations. We shoot oodles of photos often at the expense of the actual experience we are having.
All that said, this painting is only about these phenomena in part. My approach to narrative is to show signs of meaning which are willing to be apprehended and deciphered yet are intentionally misleading and evasive in favor of preventing a single conclusion. Like fragments of a dream leading the waking mind down a garden path of clues which vanish as quickly as they appear. The girl turns away from us veiling her identity behind a curtain of hair to look at her phone and remain involved in her interior life instead of engaging with the exterior world. Outside of her purview a mother and daughter look at a monumentally scaled painting. Their 'realness' is dwarfed by the giant illusion of her interiority. We see them from behind and their identities are also veiled by their backs being turned to us. We witness them considering the female gaze. They connect by holding hands and are halated objectively as the girl is metaphorically. What are they all thinking?
With A Town Called Exposition and Bull in a China Shop in my Life and How We Left It exhibit Stumptown Lounge October 2021

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View In My Room

Saint Someone Searching for a Signal Painting

Shelton Walsmith

United States

Painting, Oil on Canvas

Size: 46.5 W x 62 H x 1.5 D in

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$12,400

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ABOUT THE ARTWORK

large scale framed oil ready to hang. She appears to be taking a self portrait but she's actually looking for more bars. She's looking for a connection as we so often are. Since the advent of the mobile phone we have become increasingly attached to them and "connectivity" they represent; looking for messages from friends and family, checking the news and weather and stock and art markets to see how we are doing. We draw and read books on our phones. listen to voicemails, music and guided meditations. We shoot oodles of photos often at the expense of the actual experience we are having. All that said, this painting is only about these phenomena in part. My approach to narrative is to show signs of meaning which are willing to be apprehended and deciphered yet are intentionally misleading and evasive in favor of preventing a single conclusion. Like fragments of a dream leading the waking mind down a garden path of clues which vanish as quickly as they appear. The girl turns away from us veiling her identity behind a curtain of hair to look at her phone and remain involved in her interior life instead of engaging with the exterior world. Outside of her purview a mother and daughter look at a monumentally scaled painting. Their 'realness' is dwarfed by the giant illusion of her interiority. We see them from behind and their identities are also veiled by their backs being turned to us. We witness them considering the female gaze. They connect by holding hands and are halated objectively as the girl is metaphorically. What are they all thinking?

DETAILS AND DIMENSIONS
Painting:

Oil on Canvas

Original:

One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:

46.5 W x 62 H x 1.5 D in

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"Despite strident efforts to paint the smallness of birds monuments persist. " website: Published by The Paris Review, Knopf, Vintage, Rizzoli Books, Paris Vogue, Denver Quarterly, Shots Magazine, Harper Collins, The New York Times and others. Exhibited in New York, San Francisco, Prague, St.Thomas and Austin. His most recent one man shows was at Seven Minus Seven Gallery In the US Virgin Islands. Personal interests; weather patterns, the inner life of trees, limes, irrationality, filigreed space, tequila, the middle ages, muay thai boxing, kittens, puppies, red wine, French New Wave cinema, sharp knives, lengths of twine rolled into balls for kittens to rut and nuzzle, cowboy britches, comedy jokes, rosemary short bread, blue moons, red squares, purple rain, carrot juice, my bidet, interiors, monumentality, audit remediation, the direction up. profile pic: Self portrait holding Autumnal Brutalist collage January 26, 2022

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