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This large egg tempera panel painting depicts the forest near to my home in Fourqueux. There is an air of quiet mystery as a family of wild boar quietly makes its way into the depths of the forest, while the end-point of the path is lost in the darkness beneath the trees.
The colours and the subject reference Pisanello's 'Vision of Saint Eustace' and Uccello's 'The Hunt in the Forest', paintings which are constant references for me and which were… made at a time when the forest of Fourqueux was part of the hunting grounds of the kings of France.
The painting is in egg tempera and gold leaf on a wooden panel, with the green paint of the foliage scratched thorugh to reveal the gold beneath.
It has a fixed frame, which is part of the artwork. The dimensions given include the frame.
« 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.