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My Metamorphosis Exhibition
“The Hunter” was the first painting to be painted of my Metamorphosis series and the first commission I took as a professional artist. It depicts a Mongolian Eagle Hunter with the Atlas Mountains in the background, the mountain range at the border of Mongolia, China and Kazakstan. I was fascinated with what I learned about this tradition and its people. They personally train a golden eagle to hunt foxes from a high vantage point. Eventhough a Siberian Tiger exists in a completely different climate to a zebra, their markings are quite complimentary and matches the black and white of the snowy peaks. The Hunter seems to be well travelled, besides having a zebra, he wears a Lapis Lazuli around his neck, my favourite stone, which is only found in Afghanistan and was originally used to make the famous oil paint, Ultramarine Blue. He also has the Chinese eternal knot on his bag. He is wearing Mongolian hunting attire and might be waiting for his eagle to capture the fox he will need for his food and fur. I extended the sides of his hat to resemble an ancient Egyptian headdress and gave him Lion’s eyes. The sky is also reflected in the Zebra’s eye who has the musculature of a string racehorse. I plan to return to this motif in early 2018.
“The Hunter” was the first painting to be painted of my Metamorphosis series and the first commission I took as a professional artist. It depicts a Mongolian Eagle Hunter with the Atlas Mountains in the background, the mountain range at the border of Mongolia, China and Kazakstan. I was fascinated with what I learned about this tradition and its people. They personally train a golden eagle to hunt foxes from a high vantage point. Eventhough a Siberian Tiger exists in a completely different climate to a zebra, their markings are quite complimentary and matches the black and white of the snowy peaks. The Hunter seems to be well travelled, besides having a zebra, he wears a Lapis Lazuli around his neck, my favourite stone, which is only found in Afghanistan and was originally used to make the famous oil paint, Ultramarine Blue. He also has the Chinese eternal knot on his bag. He is wearing Mongolian hunting attire and might be waiting for his eagle to capture the fox he will need for his food and fur. I extended the sides of his hat to resemble an ancient Egyptian headdress and gave him Lion’s eyes. The sky is also reflected in the Zebra’s eye who has the musculature of a string racehorse. I plan to return to this motif in early 2018.
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VIEW IN MY ROOM

The Hunter Painting

Katharine Alecse

Romania

Painting, Oil on Canvas

Size: 48 W x 60.2 H x 1.2 D in

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SOLD
Originally listed for $6,000
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About The Artwork

“The Hunter” was the first painting to be painted of my Metamorphosis series and the first commission I took as a professional artist. It depicts a Mongolian Eagle Hunter with the Atlas Mountains in the background, the mountain range at the border of Mongolia, China and Kazakstan. I was fascinated with what I learned about this tradition and its people. They personally train a golden eagle to hunt foxes from a high vantage point. Eventhough a Siberian Tiger exists in a completely different climate to a zebra, their markings are quite complimentary and matches the black and white of the snowy peaks. The Hunter seems to be well travelled, besides having a zebra, he wears a Lapis Lazuli around his neck, my favourite stone, which is only found in Afghanistan and was originally used to make the famous oil paint, Ultramarine Blue. He also has the Chinese eternal knot on his bag. He is wearing Mongolian hunting attire and might be waiting for his eagle to capture the fox he will need for his food and fur. I extended the sides of his hat to resemble an ancient Egyptian headdress and gave him Lion’s eyes. The sky is also reflected in the Zebra’s eye who has the musculature of a string racehorse. I plan to return to this motif in early 2018.

Details & Dimensions

Painting:Oil on Canvas

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:48 W x 60.2 H x 1.2 D in

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Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

I am devoted to studying life, light and form.  I'm a constant student and believe that the more I understand something or can reproduce its essence, the better I can create a language of expression that the viewer can understand.  In this way, I can paint impossible scenes, as with realistic lighting or juxtaposition, any scene can look plausible and incite the viewer to dream.  Alternatively, sticking to a more rigorous realism, by distorting a person's facial features or anatomy just a tiny bit, I can say more about them than you would see if you looked at them in the flesh. I'm fascinated by animals, humans most of all and have a compassion for wildlife and a concern for their habitats. Particular areas of interest are: - How different animals can mirror different human characteristics.  - Power structures such as the predator-prey relationship in the animal world. - The human condition and our place in the universe.   Oil Painting was love at first sight. The colours are so vibrant! The Renaissance palette i use is limited so i can mix for exact colours. Oils have a slow drying time allowing for wet-on-wet painting, which you can't neccesarily get with fast drying paints like acrylic or water colour. They also last for centuries, which i love! I like to make large scale works as when they are seen in person, they become more than just 'paintings'. The position on the wall at eye height transforms the painting into a window, giving the illusion that it is not a 2D surface.  My portraits are mostly life-size so that you feel like the person is in the room with you.  For my series of tiled portraits I put real diamonds in the glints of the eyes to give them that little extra sparkle that white paint alone can't achieve.  Viewing a painting should be an experience and the more life-like, the more real the experience. My influences are many. Artists, musicians and friends. Some favourites include Michelangelo for his handling of form as a sculptor and use of poetic distortion, Caravaggio for his use of light, Heironymus Bosch for his monstrous inventions, his combining of the real and imagined and his high horizons. Egon Schiele , Ai Wei-Wei, Van Gogh, John Currin, Francis Bacon, Malcolm Liepke, Norman Rockwell, Banksy and Japanese woodblock prints such as Hokusai. The older I get, the more I believe that being an artist is a way of life.  I am creating the very way I live and work, and producing what I want to show to the world.

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