VIEW IN MY ROOM
France
Painting, Acrylic on Canvas
Size: 4.7 W x 6.8 H x 0.1 D in
Artist Recognition
Artist featured in a collection
I was inspired by old catechism cards. Here, it is a wobbly relationship, a game without rules that unfolds between a man and a woman, with an idea of refrain, of going back and forth perpetually. We’re swinging between a girly love statement and a crude theater scene. Roland Barthes said : In love life, the fabric of incidents is of incredible futility, and this futility, combined with the utmost seriousness, is cleanly inappropriate. When I seriously imagine killing myself for a phone that doesn’t come, there is obscenity as great as when, at Sade, the pope sodomizes a turkey.” Fragments of a love speech, 1977.
Painting:Acrylic on Canvas
Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork
Size:4.7 W x 6.8 H x 0.1 D in
Frame:Not Framed
Ready to Hang:No
Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.
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France
“You had to be stupid my poor darling! » The works of Éva Bergera are cries, white cries, deaf cries. It is a theme as old as (in)humanity that works the artist: the moral, physical, sexual and social violence inflicted on those who do not think right. A harmony of raw words and pop colors, shocking images and pious aesthetics, the work exudes an impressive force. Hell according to her is a contrast of colors both bright and soft, strewn with flowers, fruits and saints with joined hands. We see familiar faces, Loana, Claude François, the artist herself and others only known to the police – robot portraits of criminals. Eva Bergera's collages have the chilling beauty of Rogier Van Den Weyden's Last Judgment. Like the masterpiece of the Hôtel-Dieu de Beaune, they demand that we linger in front of them to appreciate all their power, the richness of the details. They are lacerated with sentences: "And what's more, this whore is nice", "Stop! Stop you tire me, order two pizzas and shut your mouth”, “Are you going to cry? “… These words, Eva Bergera heard them, collected, triturated, some were intended for her. And in the middle of this mess remains laughter, humor as an indispensable revolt against the absurd, against a conception of life devoid of meaning, of center. There will always be death at the end, so go find something to do!
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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