Dear R,
The
work you are interested in showing was made a few years ago and I have hunted
out some old journals to remind myself of the thought process and how it came
about!
Obviously
my practice has matured and moved on since then but it has been quite
interesting to re-engage with that early work and process.
At
the time I was very interested in researching Freuds uncanny and how combining
familiar materials could be suggestive or subversive.
The
fragility of the delicate painted and decorated eggs – somehow tragic yet
endearing combined with the addition of the teeth [feelings of revulsion –
elements of the body] brought about the curious work. I suppose it was a
comment – or a suggestion – the connection to the fabulous Faberge eggs –
highly valued – thinking about that and the hierarchy of things we deem as one
more valuable than another.
They
do have some kind of presence though almost like small reliquaries.
I
enjoyed the tension between the humbleness of the materials and the suggestive
connotations to the opulence of their Faberge counterparts.
It’s
strange how the work is re- contextualised as time goes on, the elevation of
humble materials into something visually interesting – could be seen in terms
of how the Pandemic has exposed society’s previous obsession with the
vacuous and shallow [celebratory culture]
I
hope this isn’t too rambling – it has been a while since I thought about this
work.
Take
care and I hope things are going okay for you in this very strange time we are
all going through.
J
J