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This piece was inspired by an essay titled 'The chicken harvesting machine' written by Dinesh Wadiwel. The themes address the question of labour in industrial farming, and the idea an animals own body being the final product of its intensive persistent involuntary labour.  Inspired by artists such as Jean-Michel Basquiat and Tracey Emin, this piece combines elements of abstract expressionism with evocative text of a critical nature presented with naivety and childlike scrawling in attempt to express irrationality and raw expression, drawn together with topical imagery.
This piece was inspired by an essay titled 'The chicken harvesting machine' written by Dinesh Wadiwel. The themes address the question of labour in industrial farming, and the idea an animals own body being the final product of its intensive persistent involuntary labour.  Inspired by artists such as Jean-Michel Basquiat and Tracey Emin, this piece combines elements of abstract expressionism with evocative text of a critical nature presented with naivety and childlike scrawling in attempt to express irrationality and raw expression, drawn together with topical imagery.
This piece was inspired by an essay titled 'The chicken harvesting machine' written by Dinesh Wadiwel. The themes address the question of labour in industrial farming, and the idea an animals own body being the final product of its intensive persistent involuntary labour.  Inspired by artists such as Jean-Michel Basquiat and Tracey Emin, this piece combines elements of abstract expressionism with evocative text of a critical nature presented with naivety and childlike scrawling in attempt to express irrationality and raw expression, drawn together with topical imagery.
This piece was inspired by an essay titled 'The chicken harvesting machine' written by Dinesh Wadiwel. The themes address the question of labour in industrial farming, and the idea an animals own body being the final product of its intensive persistent involuntary labour.  Inspired by artists such as Jean-Michel Basquiat and Tracey Emin, this piece combines elements of abstract expressionism with evocative text of a critical nature presented with naivety and childlike scrawling in attempt to express irrationality and raw expression, drawn together with topical imagery.

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Work 40 'Hard Work' Painting

zoe palmer

United Kingdom

Painting, Acrylic on Canvas

Size: 44 W x 32.5 H x 0.1 D in

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ABOUT THE ARTWORK

This piece was inspired by an essay titled 'The chicken harvesting machine' written by Dinesh Wadiwel. The themes address the question of labour in industrial farming, and the idea an animals own body being the final product of its intensive persistent involuntary labour. Inspired by artists such as Jean-Michel Basquiat and Tracey Emin, this piece combines elements of abstract expressionism with evocative text of a critical nature presented with naivety and childlike scrawling in attempt to express irrationality and raw expression, drawn together with topical imagery.

DETAILS AND DIMENSIONS
Painting:

Acrylic on Canvas

Original:

One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:

44 W x 32.5 H x 0.1 D in

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Zoe Palmer is a multidisciplinary artist born and schooled in Birmingham, United Kingdom. With a background in Fashion Design and conceptual art, she moved to London to study Fashion Design at the prestigious Westminster University, under a platinum scholarship. Interested in exploring new mediums, Zoe began studying Digital Arts at the Goldsmiths University of London where she explored digital media and fine art critical theory and completed a thesis focusing on animality in contemporary art practice - through which Zoe explores the field of human ecology and what it means to be human through her visceral and raw art practice. Zoe is currently pursuing an experimental abstract expressionist painting and writing practice in London that focuses on unconscious artistic energy, emotional confessionary writings, and naive style mark-making and drawing.

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