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Agony in the Garden Print

Miriam Cabello

Australia

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About The Artwork

Agony in the Garden portrays the events in the garden of Gethsemane, where Jesus exhorted his disciples to keep watch as he prayed, “Then he said to them…‘Stay here and keep watch with me’. Going a little farther, he fell with his face to the ground and prayed.” (Matthew 26:38-39) The boxer kneels during a gruelling training session in the park. His assistants, representing John, Peter and James, have fallen into an inebriated slumber after copious amounts of drinking. The tranquility of their sleep is juxtaposed starkly with the anguish of the boxer, who, grasping his purple towel (a colour often used to represent Christ) and skipping rope (a reference to the future lashes of the whip), looks towards heaven, at once vulnerable and pleading, yet eschewing a palpable sense of supernatural strength even on the verge of death, similar to Van Dyck’s despairing “Samson”, himself a prefigurement of Christ, in Samson Made Prisoner (c.1628-30). The contrast between the boxer and his assistants is a harmony of form and compositional geometry that seeks to bridge the Renaissance devotion to the triangle and the Baroque move towards the more complex ellipse and oval. At the heart of the canvas, circular motion is created through the sleep-limp arms of the assistants. This homage to the perfect geometrical form is reinforced in the triangular movement as the eye is led by the faces of the sleeping assistants to rest on the boxer’s left hand, the focal point of the work, from where the viewer’s gaze is invited to behold the figure of the boxer himself. At this point, having contemplated both the sleeping and the awake, the work’s balanced and elliptical whole is revealed. The painting predicts the approaching posse, intent on Jesus arrest, through the pointing hand of the uppermost assistant, John. Following his gesture reveals a number of highlights arrayed on the right of the canvas, representing the torches of the Roman guards. The boxer’s illumination by a divine ray of light distinguishes him as communing with God both verbally and in spirit. Agony in the Garden is a modern testament to the order and symmetry discovered and developed throughout four centuries of European art from the Renaissance through the Baroque and the Romantic. Resisting the modern urge towards chaos and discord, the work quotes classical composition. It reveals within a​ harmonious visual order an agony of complex and exceeding veracity.

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Print:Giclee on Fine Art Paper

Size:8 W x 12 H x 0.1 D in

Size with Frame:13.25 W x 17.25 H x 1.2 D in

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Miriam Cabello is a Chilean-Australian interdisciplinary artist, curator, and academic educator, based in Sydney. Her studio practice explores Mythology, questioning, "Where is Hercules (Heracles)? What does it mean to be Hercules in the 21st century?" She offers a host of unique artistic responses to this ambitious question. Her new multi-layered works feature some of the finest figurative contemporary paintings of universal heroes, from the celebrated to the conspicuous, from athletes to activists. To reveal and merge incompatible ideas from masculinity and feminism in contemporary art. Western Mythology juxtaposed with Meso-American myths. Allegories of Pugilism (boxing) aim to expound ideas and unearth the exploits of great heroes fighting against superhuman odds, quests and trials and the eternal fight against the powers of darkness and adversity. Hercules finds its origins in Cabello's 2011 exhibition at the DUMBO Arts Festival, Brooklyn, selected to travel to the National Art Museum of Sport, USA, titled 'Australian Aboriginal Boxing Legends'. Highlighting Lionel Rose, American Sports Illustrated wrote of his 1968 fight in Tokyo, "across Australia, that night people clung to radios as if the ringside announcer were Winston Churchill … women wept over Lionel Rose and men shouted…. Lionel Rose was Hercules, Charles Lindbergh and the Messiah all rolled into one". Miriam's creative process and the interlocking themes she has developed throughout her life and art practice are grounded on the Old Masters' historical oil painting techniques, iconography, colour symbolism and the Latin American art canon. Her innovative oil painting technique bridges the baroque and post-modern understanding of light, which affects perception. She founded ©Spectral Kinetic Realism after 20 years of academic research and creative exploration.

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