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Technical landscape with drone and mole Print

Jan Jacobs

Netherlands

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16 x 12 in ($110)

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About The Artwork

In this “technical” landscape we find: a drone, a “possible vegetation enhancement machine” to the left of the mushroom and a mole on caterpillars. Two mutants – in the process of mutating - sit on the water dam. Size: 50 x 70 cm (19.7" x 27.6") Finished May 2014. Background story The overall green color of the painting stands out. It is an "A study in green", like "A study in Scarlet". The title of the thrilling novella by Conan Doyle the English detective writer. The foreground of the painting shows us the further developed automation and mechanization of nature. Somewhere in the future. In the left foreground, a machine that probably produces living leaves or whole plants. An independent form of agricultural mechanization that got out of hand? More towards the center a plant with a lot of leaves, as if hit by a virus. Then to the right the animal, the mole on caterpillar tracks, also a “consequence” of that technical evolution. Behind it a white drone, which looks like a model airplane with a jet engine. Equipped to the level of the time with an “application oriented IC and software”. Connected to a supercomputer set up somewhere, this drone will have an overwhelming computing capacity and thus operates the pro rata built-in sensors and cameras in an all-encompassing and controlling manner. In the background to the left a group of houses, or structures resembling conventional architecture. Are they houses? Do they have a function? On the right the familiar group of trees partly reflected in the water. And then the almost infinite horizon, the depth of the painting, enhanced by the tapering banks of the canal. The large tree in the middle, most of whose foliage falls outside the painting, divides the composition in two. Then there is the dam in the middle section. On the left, a creature walks up the dam over a footboard and there are two on the dam itself. Who are they? What are they? Mutants of mammals, plants, insects a combination of these? Are they (partly) machines? There is really nothing to the right of the tree. Grass and sky. In itself that is not nothing. With this painting, the question is always: "What will the further mechanization and automation look like in the future?" Does this development affect all of nature? Although the landscape looks friendly, there is a threatening undertone: is this the result of an increasingly independent technique, in which nature has no choice? Would it be a macabre process, are we heading for an Apocalypse? For example, this apparently peaceful painting can be compared to Conan Doyle's exciting novel. Albrecht Duerer, the great German painter of the fifteenth century, was already aware that the Apocalypse sells well. Born in the time of the rise of the letterpress coast, he knew how to sell his frequently reprinted sections. Explained in this way, this painting could also be called “Tension in green”.

Details & Dimensions

Print:Giclee on Canvas

Size:16 W x 12 H x 1.25 D in

Size with Frame:17.75 W x 13.75 H x 1.25 D in

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

Jan Jacobs has been working on his new painting oeuvre since 2014. His paintings arise from his vision of the future, in which other, new forms occur. Yet he can count himself among the modern realists. He is fascinated by the influence of technology on the many facets of our existence. His subjects are about situations in space or on earth with automatic devices, spacecraft, people, animals and mutants painted entirely according to his own vision. For a long time he already had ideas about this future, but how do you transform them into a concrete drawing or painting? He often goes to museums to look at beautiful paintings. The paintings tell him a lot about the way in which a painting result is achieved, real and not real, as in real reality. With Jan Jacobs, paintings arise from powerful images and thoughts that come to him, which he must first allow to happen and which can happen to him at the most unexpected moments. In the office, as an employee of a technical wholesaler, during a telephone conversation with a customer, he can suddenly have an image attack and he then must ensure that the customer does not notice it. Creatures, robots, machines pass by in a colorful procession. Behind the drawing board it is a lot of fun to work out those ideas. They are drawings and notes together on the same sheet of paper. Then he begins with his painting. Since 2014, to his great relief, there has been more structure and clarity in his work and he is able to handle all this form information much better. His oeuvre grows and grows, now that he can place his own storm of images on paper and on canvas.

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