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Other details :
Artwork on supported wooden frame. Ready to hang. Framing on request.
Dimensions :
28.3x19.7in
About this artwork
Representation of Persephone, Greek goddess of spring and queen of the underworld
Persephone, kidnapped by Hades king of the Underworld, is condemned to live 6 months a year underground, during which time her mother Demeter, in her sadness, makes winter reign. If Persephone symbolizes the young girl caught in the conflict of pleasing her mother at the expense of her own aspirations, she also embodies the archetype of an initiate woman capable of… knowing her dark sides as much as her bright sides.
The painting visualizes two worlds, the light and the dark. The hands of the goddess represented here end in puppet faces, that of the young girl and that of death, her gestures induce that the arms turn, evoking a cycle that is renewed.
Myriam Feuilloley paints humanity. Since a pivotal dream that shaped her artistic creation, she has laid bare fictional characters with a realistic yet unconventional style. She unveils appearances to touch upon the presence of the spirit, the psyche, the invisible, within matter, the physical, the visible. She reveals embodied and sensual souls. In a symbolic mode infused with humor, these souls play with color and light, struggle, metamorphose, and seek the timeless… They are souls in evolution. Nourished by ancient Egyptian and Khmer art, inspired by Hieronymus Bosch, and influenced by Dali and Modigliani, Feuilloley's work is unique and instantly recognizable. It unfolds through drawings, pastels, watercolors, and oil paintings, and is firmly rooted in contemporary surrealism.