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This painting celebrates common garden birds, placing them on a gold background, amongst luscious red roses. Lara Broecke uses techniques typical of the art of the late medieval and early Renaissance periods to call to mind religious art, returning a sense of wonder and spirituality to our perception of everyday creatures. The painting hovers between realism - the sharp eyes and almost tangible texture of the birds' plumage - and the decorative,… making the mundane precious.
The painting is executed using historical pigments, such as vermilion and cochineal, hand-ground in egg yolk tempera. The background is water gilded onto a gesso priming, prepared with red bole.
The dimensions given include the frame, which is fixed and forms part of the artwork. The painting is signed and dated on the back and a picture wire has been attached so that it is ready to hang.
« I seek to rekindle in contemporary viewers a sense of wonder, awe and tenderness in relation to the world around them. »
Lara Broecke's passion for early Italian art was born while living in Florence. She currently lives in France and paints using early Italian techniques - gold leaf and egg tempera paint, made by hand-grinding pigments in egg yolk, on wooden panels coated with gesso. She marries a medieval sensibility with contemporary compositions, creates rich representations of the natural world and man's relationship to it.