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Other details :
Artwork on supported wooden frame. Ready to hang. Framing on request.
Dimensions :
31.5x39.4in
About this artwork
In “Venus and Mars” I refer to four image sources: the barrel-shaped olive-green structure in the foreground was originally a landmine, the lady in the low-cut lace dress and the young man holding a shell to his ear come from modern fashion and beauty -world, whereas the child with the much too large helmet and the lance with a wooded background comes from Botticelli's “Venus and Mars”. Based on this, the following interpretation would be obvious:… If you see the current model as Venus and place the young man with the shell in relation to Botticelli's shell-blowing satyr boys in "Venus and Mars", the taming of the aggressive god of war would be through Venus and thus through the eternal, cosmic power of love, as expressed in the Neoplatonic Renaissance philosophy. This idealistic interpretation is unfortunately counteracted by the landmine.
Heribert Heere uses collage, paintings (oil, acrylic, watercolor), digital media, and photography; his artistic development was honed at the Academy of Fine Arts Munich and shaped by art historical studies. With sophisticated stylistic pluralism, he combines old and new, representational and abstract, and the trivial with high culture in his works, allowing collage, painting, and montage to flow seamlessly into one another. His works create a poetic tension and invite viewers to reflect on the constant metamorphosis of our culture and to experience the interplay of meanings on an emotional level.