0 Views
0
View In My Room
Fine Art Paper
9 x 12 in ($50)
White ($80)
0 Views
0
This print was created for a show in London, 2024, that featured the art object 'Nostalgia'. Nostalgia statement: An accidental project built over time. The limited-edition 50th Anniversary cans of Andy Warhol-branded Campbell’s soup were no match for the Tokyo humidity. Purchased in 2014, they started to mold almost immediately. After enough time had passed, I set up a studio to shoot them. I am of the opinion that Andy would love them. The accidents kept accidenting, and eventually it was safer for everyone (cats included) if the soup cans were kept in airtight containers. And thus, the Art of Soup project evolved to become two pieces: 'Accidental Apathy' and 'Nostalgia', named for two very different effects that time and the consideration of its passing have on the observer. Although the beginnings of this set are far from existential, over time, their behaviors and evolution have bordered on universal. Aptly titled, they have come to serve as a commentary on modern capitalist and consumerist culture, crisis and disaster fatigue, failed investments, and the attention span of modern humans.
2024
Giclee on Fine Art Paper
9 W x 12 H x 0.1 D in
14.25 W x 17.25 H x 1.2 D in
White
Yes
Ships in a Box
Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.
Ships in a box. Art prints are packaged and shipped by our printing partner.
Printing facility in California.
Please visit our help section or contact us.
United Kingdom
Gina-Marie Cincinnati is an American artist currently based in the UK. Born in West Islip, New York in 1981, she grew up in Bel Air, Maryland before settling in Baltimore, Maryland for college at Maryland Institute College of Art in 1999. She moved to Germany in 2009 to live and work until 2013. She landed in Tokyo, Japan in 2014, where she pursued an active arts career alongside her work as an educator. There, she separated from all that had been holding her back artistically. The work started with reclaiming derogatory language used against people identifying as female in typographic paintings, then progressed to collage and mixed media using her own and found photographs, acrylic paint, and Japanese papers. She relocated to the UK with her cats and husband in September, 2023. After a successful showing at the XIV Florence Biennale, she found herself in a new country, on new medications, moving towards more extensive mixed-media pieces that continue to focus on the passage of and our experience of time, self-actualization, womxn’s issues, modern capitalist and consumerist culture, crisis or disaster fatigue, and the attention span of modern humans. Her work considers our experience of the passage of time. The functions and growth beyond our control tend to proceed unnoticed. As an artist trained in photography, she often contemplates what it means to capture a moment that will never exist again and will pass by too quickly to be adequately experienced, enjoyed, and cataloged. As a mixed media artist, she takes this concept further to question what it means to actively remain present for these passing moments. What are the possibilities? How can the moments be documented and truly experienced? How many will be fully remembered in the fleeting seconds that amount to a lifetime? What of them remains tangible or visible once they (and we) have passed? Most of her pieces are, in some way, different interpretations or experiences of time. Many are ongoing projects that will continue to age and evolve for years. Each of them questions, in various ways, the value of things, or a life, a body, and time spent. Does their lack of function or lost purpose diminish their existence or value? The viewer must decide for themselves.
We deliver world-class customer service to all of our art buyers.
Our 14-day satisfaction guarantee allows you to buy with confidence.
Explore an unparalleled artwork selection by artists from around the world.
We pay our artists more on every sale than other galleries.