Number Heads
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Medium:
Acrylic & calligraphy Inks - An eclectic mix of techniques:
By utilising the qualities of the good watercolour paper Christina
is able to work wet in wet, achieving natural organic textures
within the painted areas. This difficult and often unpredictable
technique gives her work a unique and distinctive style. Hemp
and Himalayan hand made Paper plus papers hand made by the
Artist, feature in a new collection of abstract contemporary works.
The artist is confining
her interpretation to a particular theme of the glyphics:
the Nine Lords of the Night. This is the first series for
Christina who is hoping to provide an ongoing narrative, with
the aim of extrapolating the writings for a modern audience.
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Style:
Christina has compiled a new series of Celtic designs that
feature traditional and contemporary motifs: Animals, birds,
religious and cultural symbolism. The artist’s hand-made
papers are semi-abstract and employ traditional colours for
a highly contemporary appeal, yet retaining an old, weathered
splendour. In this way Christina resurrects, old, half-forgotten
formats and with an imaginative twist can transform them into
something somewhere between old and brand spanking new.
Christina’s newest work is the re-interpretation of
Mayan Indian glythic writing system. The technique involves
using calligraphy ink on watercolour paper to create a glowing
watercolour style. Until recent times the communication
system used by the Mayan Indians was shrouded in mystery.
However in the 1980s experts began making real progress deciphering
the code and a whole new world fell before us. As Christina
explained, “There is of course a marvellous contradiction
because this ‘new’ world is not new in itself
– it is only new, or unfamiliar to us…and without
ever being fully conscious of it, our modern civilisations
have borrowed and assimilated much of the ancient cultures
and claimed it as their own. It’s very like the biblical
assurance that “the stone that the builders have rejected
has become the corner stone.” She continues, “I
think, generally, there is a form of hypocrisy about how,
as a civilisation, we perceive ourselves. By re-interpreting
the Mayan hieroglyphics I want to expose some of this ambiguity,
and open up a new narrative.” |
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Griffin
Mask
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