47 Views
3
View In My Room
Printmaking, Digital on Paper
Size: 14 W x 20 H x 0.1 D in
Ships in a Tube
47 Views
3
Handstand is an experiment in minimalism and silhouette. Unlike many of my pieces, I had no political or social ax to grind here. This piece is an expression of my love for the female form and the beauty it creates. It is purely an aesthetic work. Please enjoy. Handstand is offered as a numbered, signed, limited run print. Custom sizes are available by request. Use the Contact Us link and Submit a Request for details. This work is made from PowerPoint autoshapes. No Photoshop. No Illustrator. Made using the simplest of tools, because there is something extraordinary about a crystal chalice made with a chisel.
2018
Digital on Paper
100
14 W x 20 H x 0.1 D in
Not Framed
Not applicable
Ships Rolled in a Tube
Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.
Ships rolled in a tube. Artists are responsible for packaging and adhering to Saatchi Art’s packaging guidelines.
United States.
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United States
I create original drawings of women, transgender women, and occasionally men, that highlight their diversity and beauty. I hope these works will evoke an emotional reaction in you. The work is political. In these days when misogyny, bigotry, and even outright calls to violence have become a fixture of the political landscape, any work that respects diversity and calls it beauty is a work of protest. The hostile way that images of women are produced and consumed is challenged by my work. It is my hope that I can capture truly human moments that each of us can relate to or admire, and in so doing enhance the social respect that we all should receive by right. Women are not the second sex. Transgender persons are not knockoffs, less than those who are assigned their most fitting gender at birth. These truths shouldn’t need explaining. I came to art early. My mother was deeply impressed by an artist interview in which the artist told of scrounging desperately for materials when he was young. She decided no child of hers would do without art materials, and that encouragement alone launched my interest in art. It was one of the truest gifts of my life. I hope you will agree. As you look through my list of influences, you might be puzzled that my work doesn't fall neatly into any of these artist's styles, or their associated movements. I am deeply affected by each of these artists or movements, but I am not trying to follow in their footsteps as a craftsman might. Instead, each informs my aesthetic sensibility as I try to create something new, fresh, and relevant. Of my influences, the one I am most commonly compared to is Patrick Nagel, a Los Angeles pop artist from the 1970s and 80s, who did stark, very commercial, very slick images of vaguely detached, vaguely Asian, vaguely sophisticated women, sexually intimidating and fierce. I see the resemblance in look, but in intention I am nothing like Nagel at all. Nagel specifically intended to objectify his subject. I want to personalize and humanize our vision of women. Nagel did not want to know the women he imagined in his works. I want you to feel you already know the subjects in my works. I want you to recognize yourself in them. I want you to want to meet them.
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