THE QUINN /
humanity at its worstdistanced divided I. A.M. M.A.R.C. Q.U.I.N.N. Tagboard /
the noobs /
dede
lucy
Archives /
April 2012May 2012 Recent
Marc Quinn, Alison Lapper Pregnant (2005) vs Ron M... My Works.... HYPERREALIST THE HUMAN BODY The Kiss Alison Lapper Pregnant - The Fourth Plinth not a copycat! I AM THE NEXT DA VINCI. untitled, yet. BAMF BABAY. The Story of My Life Credits /
This skin is produced by Headlight Productions. The icons are from Three More Steps. All codes are meticulously hand-coded, and can not be used as basecodes or reference. All css and javascript in the code passes validation.© Copyright Headlight 2008 - Forever. All Rights Reserved. |
//Monday, April 16, 2012 4:58 AM
Siren
Kate Moss, my object of fascination.
Or rather, beauty, my concept of fascniation.
Kate Moss, to me, almost seems to be the modern-day Aphrodite reminding how she has become so iconic she's almost on the equal level as goddesses in the past.
Marble was used in the past as the primary material of sculptures due to its durability, but I thought, why not, just maybe, use gold?
Though it may not be as durable, but sure it'll stand out. A modern-day Aphrodite has to stand out right?
And well, it hasn't been used much since the ancient Egyptian times and i thought it was pretty relevant to do so, as is Moss was an object of worshipping, where everyone look towards her as a living definition of beauty.
Look at her eyes, return her intense gaze.
But wait, you can't take your eyes off her overly contorted body?
Lely's Venus much, anyone? Merely striking a charismatic pose is no longer enough. You need to go beyond that to be recognized, to be noticed.
Someone once asked me, why Siren?
Well, let me enlighten you with the myth of sirens. They are deadly marine seductresses that lure nearby sailors with their enchanting voice to shipwreck at the rocky coasts to their islands.
Beautiful, yet deadly.
My sculptures are about our need for images that people wreck their lives on, trying to achieve impossible wealth, immortality, bodily proportions, beauty. That is why I called the piece ‘Siren’. I want it to be this black hole of everything that is seductive and unattainable.
damn, i think i look good in this picture.
loves,
MQ
//Sunday, April 15, 2012 5:35 AM
SELF
"Well, I think it’s a great sculpture. I’m really happy with it. I think it is inevitable that you have one piece people focus in on. But that's really good because it gets people into the work."
// 5:29 AM
MARCO EXHIBITION - Chemical Life Support series
Brief Introduction… …"Chemical Life Support" includes several compelling figurative sculptures of people who keep chronic illness at bay with drugs. Each sculpture is cast from polymer wax mixed with the drug that keeps each subject alive. The reclining individual figures are positioned as if at zero gravity, conceived so that they barely touch the plinths on which they are set. Use of material… … This series of work is about hidden things in life. People are kept alive by certain drugs- although when you meet the person, they look the same as you or I. I think it’s interesting to have the material in a sense hidden as well, so that when you look at it, it doesn’t immediately tell you that there is this drug involved in the making of the artwork. Each sculpture has mixed into the wax one daily dose of the drug the subject takes; so on any given day, the subject and the sculpture have the same amount of drug in them. Having a sense of weightlessness… … I wanted them to be suspended between life and death, in a way, or slightly out of life, as when asleep. So when all the models came to the studio, I provided some pillows and stuff, and when they went into sleeping position, and we made a mould of them in that position. And then we took the pillows and bedclothes out, so that they are in fact in the position they would be in when they are sleeping in bed. But because there are only a couple of points where they touch the floor, they appear to float above it. They appear to be in life but also slightly outside it at the same time, in a contingent reality of some sort. Perception of the audience… … When you’re in that room with those Chemical Life support sculptures, you kind of feel that they are soft, or delicate. |
|