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Other details :
Artwork on supported wooden frame. Artwork framed.
Dimensions :
23.6x13.8in
About this artwork
Strictly speaking, this work does not belong to "The Queen" series, even though it depicts the same figure. Unlike the other twelve pieces in the series, this one is colorful, and the focus is less on the mineral material itself and more on the story the painting tells. Here, we see a queen holding her crown in her hand like a tambourine, seemingly dancing before her window in the evening. The overall reddish hue suggests she is in a room with a… fireplace. Looking behind her through the window, we see a village being destroyed by fire. This queen bears a striking resemblance to Emperor Nero playing music before a burning Rome...
The artwork is a mixed-media piece on canvas. It combines photography, digital art, and acrylic painting (glossy glazes and raised squares), making it a unique work of art. The painting is framed in black (total dimensions: approximately 67 x 42 cm).
« In the age of digital technologies, I couldn't just be a painter or a photographer. My 'paintographies' destroy borders and offer a resolutely contemporary hybrid art. »
Georges Dumas's artistic approach is both simple and complex. While the aesthetic of his works, which he describes as "paintographies," is highly figurative, their composition is slow and complex, blending photography, digital art, and acrylic paint. Georges Dumas transforms the models he photographs into virtual sculptures by replacing their skin with mineral materials to represent both the passage of time and the fragility of the body.