A Portrait of Self Destruction -Self Portrait

Artwork

A Portrait of Self Destruction -Self Portrait

£4,000.00

The new painting series : "A portrait of self destruction”

embraces known portraits by Cravaggio  (and some self portraits) which I have re-painted in full, detail to detail within a few hours to preserve the freshness of the paint and then destroyed with a few violent brush strokes, leaving a faint  resemblance to the original portrait.  The process creates a “vail” of which the portraits appears and disappears much same as my photographic skulls series ( Godspeed you), but more so deals with notions of decomposing, creation and destruction, death in its more artistic representation, controlled by the hand of the artist, whom for a fleeting moment plays god to its creation.

Year created: 2012

Medium: Painting

Size (H x W x D): 120 x 120 x 3 cm

14 days delivery

The estimated delivery time is 3 weeks.

Own Art £400 for 10 months with Own Art.

Artist Profile

Michal (Michaella) Cole

Michal is a London based multi-disciplined artist. Her work ranges from photography to paintings, sculptures, video and collages.

A graduate of Central Saint Martins college of art and design, Michal exhibited world wide and is a winner of the Scope Miami competition, The 2011 Signature Art awards and the noted Showdown competition at the Saatchi Gallery in London.

Michal’s work engages the themes of death, violence and beauty and is formed out of emotional and mental materials that have accompanied her throughout her life: pieces of memories, fragments of events, reoccurring sensations and perceptions both personal and global– "a relentless noise", as she puts it. From within all these emerges the "self" as a continuous arena of decomposing and recomposing. As such, Michal’s work is authentic: staring in the face of death on several occasions Michal’s perception and presentation is one of sublime beauty, yet its calmness and serenity is shadowed by a tense sense of violence. In her still life series-“Godspeed you” The skulls seems to appear and disappear, floating in a “black hole”- a liminal space: illusive, beautiful yet threatening. In some of the photos a color explosion of blooming roses appears while the skulls are transparent and faded.

Michal drawers her inspiration from renaissance art and the great masters using the circular presentation of the “Tondo” to symbolize the cycle of life and death, as well as the eternity, both the spiritual and the physical: Art as a form of permanence, of lasting beyond the body and time, and the preservation of ones existence and ideas. Her work process is notably one of pure photography.  She does not engage in any digital manipulation or enhancements and hence developed a unique photographic process of photographing the subjects. This is in staying true to her concept of capturing “ a moment in time’ and the adaptation of Roland Barthes idea of the “Punctum”

 

Michal’s artwork provides a reflection on life, loss, destiny and chance. Allusions to the catastrophic violence of the everyday life as well as thoughts about global occurrences.  As such, it reminds us of our past, present, and future, and, above all, the fragility of life itself.

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