The mysterious boats. One plate from the suite of 20 prints entitled 'Trust Me'
Print
1992-1993 (printed)
1992-1993 (printed)
Artist/Maker | |
Place of origin |
The prints in this portfolio take their inspiration from 1950s illustrations of science magic tricks in comic-book, somewhat diagrammatic, style. The artist has taken these and combined them with a kind of 'stream of consciousness' or 'automatic' drawing (where the artist does not really think about what they are doing in a conscious way). In a statement about the set of prints the artist notes that the juxtaposition of title and image, and of illustration (taken from the science magic book source) and hand painted gesture "imply cause and effect, triggering a psychological drama within". Some of the images seem very feminist, in that they show female figures in controlling positions within the overall narrative of the image. The suite shows how an artist can combine a found or ready-made source with their own work to produce images with a certain psychological complexity. This particular image shows a figure lying prone at the lower margin, with above, a bowl of paper boats floating in water.
Object details
Categories | |
Object type | |
Title | The mysterious boats. One plate from the suite of 20 prints entitled 'Trust Me' (assigned by artist) |
Materials and techniques | Intaglio |
Brief description | Elizabeth Marran: The mysterious boats. One plate from the suite of 20 prints entitled 'Trust Me' 1992 |
Physical description | Image with the head and shoulders of a figure lying prone at the bottom margin; above, paper boats in a bowl of water. |
Dimensions |
|
Production type | Limited edition |
Copy number | not numbered. Artist's proof |
Credit line | Given by the artist |
Production | Attribution note: this suite is un-numbered but the edition is 20 with three artist's proofs. |
Subject depicted | |
Summary | The prints in this portfolio take their inspiration from 1950s illustrations of science magic tricks in comic-book, somewhat diagrammatic, style. The artist has taken these and combined them with a kind of 'stream of consciousness' or 'automatic' drawing (where the artist does not really think about what they are doing in a conscious way). In a statement about the set of prints the artist notes that the juxtaposition of title and image, and of illustration (taken from the science magic book source) and hand painted gesture "imply cause and effect, triggering a psychological drama within". Some of the images seem very feminist, in that they show female figures in controlling positions within the overall narrative of the image. The suite shows how an artist can combine a found or ready-made source with their own work to produce images with a certain psychological complexity. This particular image shows a figure lying prone at the lower margin, with above, a bowl of paper boats floating in water. |
Associated objects | |
Collection | |
Accession number | E.341:13-2007 |
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Record created | August 24, 2007 |
Record URL |
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