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Medium :
Pen on Cardboard , Cardboard under plexiglas
Framing :
Framed
Dimensions :
6.2x8.3in
About this artwork
Originally drawn in 1996, Fragmentation was drawn when I was living in France. My personal life, in many ways, seemed to be unravelling, hence the title. Using a fineliner, I weave surreal and symbolic elements to explore the fragmented nature of my identity and existence.
This is reflected in the various disturbing images within the piece: bodies hanging from trees in the upper right; the demonic masks on the far left and lower right; the embryo… impaled on the cross and the artist's disintegrating face.
Existence is thrown into question: The self-portrait itself is only half-complete; the upper half, that houses the brain, is missing - an empty space, recalling a song of the era: 'Where is My Mind?' (The Pixies).
A memento-mori - the skull atop a woman's form, inside the trunk of a tree - faces us, as does the auto-portrait, inviting us to consider too, our own existence.
In the top right corner, an angel prays over me, symbolising hope. Time will tell.
Anthony Hodgson is a self-taught painter and visual artist who works primarily with pen, pastels, and acrylics, deeply influenced by his upbringing amidst religious art, fantasy, and sci-fi culture. His style fuses Surrealism, Existentialism, and Pop Art, blending symbolic dreamscapes, Celtic knots, contemporary icons, and mythic narratives to reveal the hidden tensions of existence. In each piece, he seeks to mirror the human condition, evoking a sense of redemption through brokenness and celebrating the mysterious interplay of darkness, light, and the hope that emerges from within our fractured lives.