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Other details :
Unmounted artwork. Mounting and/or framing available on request.
Dimensions :
60x66in
About this artwork
2025 / Acrylic, latex, oil pastel and rhinestone on canvas. The artwork comes with wood bars on top and bottom, so it can be hanged easily but also can be shipped rolled.
Part of my series "Latin American Folk Tales" based on the leyend of "the Siguanaba"
Siguanaba is a supernatural figure from Central American folklore. She is a shape-shifting spirit who most often appears as a beautiful, long-haired woman bathing in a river, public water tank,… or other body of water—always seen from behind. On dark nights, she lures wandering men with her beauty, never letting them see her face at first. Entranced, the men follow her off their paths, only to become lost in deep canyons or shadowy forests. When they finally draw close enough to see her face, they discover the horrifying truth: beneath her lovely hair, she has the face of a horse. The shock is said to leave her victims frozen in terror, struck catatonic by the sight.
« I create colorful, warm and happy art- just like my homeland. My graphic-design and illustration background allowed me to diversify my style into Illustrative, geometric and expressionist themes. »
Ilaamen Pelshaw is a Guatemalan painter based in the United States whose work has been featured in solo and group shows nationally. Growing up with a grandfather who was an artist and muralist, Pelshaw became interested in art herself and developed a practice centered around positivity and warmth. Mostly working in acrylic on canvas, her work is always colorful and illustration based, whether through quirky animal portraits or paintings of Latin American culture and crafts.