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Dictaean Double-Axe Print

Gary Alden

United States

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16 x 20 in ($146)

16 x 20 in ($146)

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Dictaean Double-Axe. The double-axe was an important Minoan religious symbol. Bronze double-axes were found in the Dictaean cave, where Zeus was worshipped, and are associated with the Cretan labyrinth, which is connected with a complex of myth, symbol, and allegory. The earliest reported labyrinth ...

Year Created:

2023

Subject:
Medium:

Print, Giclee on Canvas

Rarity:

Open Edition

Size:

16 W x 20 H x 1.25 D in

Size with Frame:

17.75 W x 21.75 H x 1.25 D in

Ready to Hang:

Yes

Frame:

White

Canvas Wrap:

White Canvas

Packaging:

Ships in a Box

Delivery Cost:

Calculated at checkout.

Delivery Time:

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

Returns:

All Open Edition prints are final sale items and ineligible for returns. Visit our help section for more information.

Handling:

Ships in a box. Art prints are packaged and shipped by our printing partner.

Ships From:

Printing facility in California.

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Previously an art restorer, I now use a meditative painting process to create biomorphic labyrinths, single organic paths that tangle but are never blocked. I was raised in Bordentown, a small historic colonial-era village on the Delaware River, in the heart of agricultural South Jersey. I studied art materials and techniques at the Art Institute of Chicago and the University of Chicago. I then learned paintings conservation at a regional laboratory near Cleveland. I spent my working adulthood in California, in Santa Barbara and San Diego, in studios that restored paintings from all eras. After I returned east, a series of near-fatal health crises persuaded me to change careers to information technology and civic social relief. I married another paintings conservator, and now I live in Chelsea, on the Hudson River in Manhattan, in a high rise complex that houses more people than lived in the village where I was raised. (I know because I looked it up.) My own paintings were always figurative, until recently. Now, despite my Parkinson’s, I take solace in expressive abstraction. I rediscovered a meditative painting technique I developed as a teenager. I have never seen anyone else make paintings like these. If I have been influenced by anybody, it has been my younger, freer self. As well as all the painters whose works I held in my hands, under my care as a restorer. Also, I have always loved comic books, and the strong lines of the best comics may have informed my paintings. As a restorer, I would hover close to the surfaces of paintings when using a microscope, scalpel, or cotton swab. In my own paintings, I continue to work close to the surface and therefore use archival acrylic paints which dry quickly and prevent unwanted smudges. I try to avoid corrections, and sometimes incorporate happy accidents into the evolution of the design.

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