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The Torch of Beauty Shines - Limited Edition of 10 Photograph

Malcolm D B Munro

United States

Photography, Digital on Paper

Size: 36 W x 34 H x 0.8 D in

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Showed at the The Other Art Fair

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About The Artwork

The image in the work reflects a preoccupation of mine. Strictly speaking, the torch, the flame, represent truth. But beauty in art is truth. No closer depiction of it is possible. The choice of an Ancient Greek torch serves to bring into the present our heritage and debt to the Attic Greeks. The torch is, of course, still used in modern day Olympic Games but I think its origins may be overlooked. Some weeks ago I came to the conclusion that, to maintain a balance of self, I should marry my Engineering life with that of my Art: left leg, right leg. The poem consciously echoes that of Walt Whitman. I hope I do not have a tin ear and that the poem stands on its own merit. The word shine is difficult to parse. Were the torch in the image to he set against a black background, somehow the sense of the work would be lost. I am not quite sure why this is so. But the shining is symbolic rather than literal.

Details & Dimensions

Photography:Digital on Paper

Artist Produced Limited Edition of:10

Size:36 W x 34 H x 0.8 D in

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

It is possible, though not proven, that abilities of whatever nature, come from our genes, passed on by parents. In my case, my mother. My mother dripped art. Her sister, whom I never met, was a concert pianist though both brothers were engineers as was their father. My mother lived entirely in the arts world and I grew up in Edinburgh surrounded by artists of all nationalities. I remember visiting one, a painter. Long after my mother had left us, my two brothers and I visited an artist friend of hers. He was as poor as were we and he gave us bread slices covered in sugar. My father, an intellectual and self appointed scholar, had chosen not to work; defeated by the breakdown of his marriage. We went overnight from among the very wealthy in the city into genteel poverty since he had lost his job with the Royal Society of Edinburgh as a result of his withdrawal from the outside world. This was a peculiar upbringing. What it meant for me is that I could not do anything but choose a career which guaranteed security of employment and income throughout my life. A natural choice was engineering. I spent my life in this career for which I was quite unsuited and quite alien to me but I was good at it, I am tempted to say, very, very good, unfortunately. Now I have reached a point, with that career behind me, where I can pursue what I love and am good at. Well, better at. All those years, in every waken hour outside of the demands of the intensity which engineering requires, were spent pursing knowledge and practice of arts; art, literature, theatre and music. At college I hung around with the artists. My fellow engineering students seemed alien beings to me. I was fortunate indeed to grow up in Edinburgh and one could not wish for a fuller cultural environment. Since my mother was an artist, I was exposed early to the creation of art, both hers and that of her artist friends. Before coming to this country to join family, I lived in South Africa for a period of years, which has influenced me in ways that are not readily apparent in any of my art works. I think the profundity of influence is due to the particular light that fills the landscapes of that part of the world and the people. There is, too, a deeply felt sense of being connected to the world and to the soil upon which we stand and live. I suspect that the political situation of the time made me aware of power abused to subjugate others and to deny them their freedom.

Artist Recognition

Showed at the The Other Art Fair

Handpicked to show at The Other Art Fair presented by Saatchi Art in New York, London

Artist featured in a collection

Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection

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