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Salvation Army positive red baby rat wave ⌗8 (80% to be sent to the Japan Appeal) - All Editions SOLD Photograph

Hannah Biscombe

United Kingdom

Photography, Photogram on Paper

Size: 11.6 W x 8.3 H x 0.1 D in

Ships in a Crate

SOLD
Originally listed for $170

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ABOUT THE ARTWORK

The rat is a positive and auspicious symbol in Japan. A white rat accompanies the God of Happiness and they are associated with good luck and wealth. This piece is digitally constructed from hundreds of contact photograms of baby rats. The exposures took 5 years and a number of litters to make. This has been reproduced as a miniature version of the original negative prints transposed onto a positive red background This image is from a series that I have been working on based on Katsushika Hokusai's Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji, In terms of colour I had been playing with blue because of its particular association with Hokusai's original prints, however red and white in combination are celebratory colours in Japan so this felt more fitting. The Edition of this print is unlimited and £28 from each sale will be donated to the Salvation Army’s efforts in Japan.

DETAILS AND DIMENSIONS
Photography:

Photogram on Paper

Artist Produced Limited Edition of:

1

Size:

11.6 W x 8.3 H x 0.1 D in

SHIPPING AND RETURNS
Delivery Time:

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

My working practice is grounded in the use of photograms - a primitive photographic technique that records the space around objects on paper- made of living creatures. A fundamental part of the interest in this primal form of "writing with light" is the concept of extending what is a basic but nevertheless deeply connotative visual language. The weight, the size and the shape of things contribute to the image but are also lost in it. The relentless passage of time that is made painfully obvious by conventional photography is less apparent in photograms. It is their lack of specificity that gives them an essentially timeless and ephemeral quality. The stripping away of that fine "˜perfectly realistic' quality and evidential detail, may make them a less well-rendered index -but perhaps closer to the way our minds capture and remember detail. An image made by direct contact These photograms are processed traditionally and then scanned to enable them to be reconstructed as a larger, increasingly complex work. They are then printed. The resulting work illustrates not only the indexical and eloquent nature of silhouettes, but also suggest a certain truth in the way that the "Dadaist" movement viewed the original "˜Rayograms' - as affirmation that the ordinary can have incantory powers. The work aims to transcend the photograph's sense of loss. It is about containment, escape and exploring the way in which the combination of photography's most basic format with digital editing technology offers the potential for radical new visual forms.

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Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection

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