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Other details :
Artwork on supported wooden frame. Ready to hang. Framing on request.
Dimensions :
29.5x34.6in
About this artwork
Inspired by Kintsugi, a Japanese technique of repairing old broken pots or vases with a golden paste, making them look even more interesting. I belief that the pandemic period should do just that. We have isolated so much from each other, but somehow we have turned to our own selves and now we have the chance of trying to repair with "golden paste" all the broken pieces that we left behind. The canvas was torn into pieces after being painted, and… all the pieces were then sewn together with golden thread by one of my best friends, Beti Piscureanu, the owner of a clothing brand.
« I am infinite and I have been infinite ever since I first laid the first stoke of brush on a canvas. »
Getty Tatomir is an artist and fashion designer from Romania, currently living mostly in Tuscany, Italy, whose paintings have been featured in several solo exhibitions nationally and internationally. She describes every line, shape, and color that covers her canvases as originating from her inner world that "feeds on energies, dreams, realities, reactions, sounds, feelings, places, almost anything that makes it shiver with a desire to expose itself". Her expressive abstractions are most often created with acrylics on canvas and often stand out because of the intense chromatic contrasts that she uses in order to render a certain feeling or sensation for the viewer. She also co-founded her own clothing brand, No Asha Da, where she and her businesspartner create fashion items with high quality prints of her paintings.