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Sculpture, Paper mache on Other
Size: 13.8 W x 7.9 H x 13.8 D in
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The Queen's Thoughts Homer’s Penelope inspires me. I imagined her lying down at the bottom of the sea. In all of us lives the longing to find our soul mate, like she does. I wanted to show how some of her features became fragile by water erosion, while it it still possible to feel the strength of this ancient queen. I used a special kind of white paper mache, because it reminded me of the sand of the sea. I kept her mouth sensual and soft, while I tried to make her skin look like lace, although the material is strong like wood. The holes in het face are three-dimensional and capture light and shadow subtle and suggestive. Her soul seems to be looking at you, although her eye is another opened hole. This adds to the mystery. You might wonder, whether she is alive or just showing us a glance of het personality in her fragmented mask.
2016
Paper mache on Other
One-of-a-kind Artwork
13.8 W x 7.9 H x 13.8 D in
Not Framed
Not applicable
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Netherlands.
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Netherlands
I was born in Groningen, the Netherlands, in 1962. I grew up as the second daughter of a family with four children. I soon came into contact with textile because there was plenty of it lying about our house as a consequence of my father’s profession. Even as a young girl I had a strong feeling for the material because I believed that anything made of textile could not be broken and because I wanted nothing more than to act out my imagination with various fabrics. My mother had a whole chest full of cloths made of all kinds of fiber. Even her wedding dress was in this chest and it was subjected to a snipping session for a theatre play. Sometimes my father arrived home with a suitcase from which a minor wonder would emerge. Suddenly the floor was scattered with samples, colours and patterns. Then the stories began. Distant journeys, other cultures, exotic food. In this way, a piece of cloth became the fabric of a story. Full of excitement and expectation I would touch it, as if I myself were also in that other world. Occasionally I would find a small error in the soul of the fabric, in the embroidery, or perhaps a slight colour deviation in the pattern. Human hands had made it. That fired the imagination. I attended grammar school where I first came into contact with mythology. This has remained a nutrient medium for my work, which has always been related to stories. I discovered the true significance of batik patterns, wajang, African masks, and art – Paul Klee, the Bauhaus and other art movements. A route began to open up to me. In this period I saw the Triangel Figurentheater for the first time, a surrealistic puppet theatre presented by Henk Boerwinkel, which enjoyed worldwide acclaim. This left a deep impression on me. After all, textile couldn’t simply come to life spontaneously? I have never forgotten this performance, but it still took some time before I found my own way. I went to the Academie voor Expressie en Communicatie (AVEC) in Leeuwarden in 1981. I wanted to work with people. At the Academie I experimented with costumes, puppets, Commedia dell’Arte, masks, movement and theatre. Pina Bausch was one of the people who inspired me, and I visited her in Wuppertal to study the effects of theatre in which personal motives are interwoven. After graduating, I contacted the Pop en Spel Kollektief (Puppet and Play Collective), a professional theatre company. Yvon Hofer educated me in the practical aspects of puppet-making.
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