To My Twenties

21 OCTOBER 2020
The Old Central St. Martins Building, 48, 12 Southampton Row, WC1B 4AF Live Streamed Auction
Emilie Fitzgerland, Into the woods, The Auction Collective
Emilie Fitzgerland, Into the woods, The Auction Collective
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24. Emilie Fitzgerald

Into the Woods

Signed (on the reverse)
Oil and acrylic on canvas
40 x 30 cm.
Created in 2020

ESTIMATE


£200 - 400
Shipping estimate
To My Twenties (24/48)

Notes


"In this painting I wanted to really capture how I felt in my twenties but as with my other work made during lockdown, I couldn’t help but also respond to the impact that was having. On one hand I can see in this painting the idea of having a journey to go on and a representation of moving forward. At the same time the woods for me have often felt like a symbol of escapism and I think I can also see that desire here which is most likely a response to the pandemic and the way it’s shifted how we think about work and our daily lives."

- Emilie Fitzgerald, 2020. 

Through visual illusions and contrasting mixed languages, Emilie Fitzgerald’s work investigates the balance between subject-matter and surface-matter.

Using Winnicott’s theory of transitional phenomena, Emilie uses nostalgic and often kitsch imagery with reference to fairy tales and children’s stories, exploring themes of temptation, seduction and deception through symbolic food and landscapes.

Combining different visual languages in a pastiche approach to painting, Emilie often transcribes archetypal images from artists like Paul Cezanne, Salvador Dali and Matisse, contrasting these against Bob Ross landscapes and children’s illustrations as well as photography and digital art.

Emilie creates a level of visual ambiguity that questions what is real and what is artificial; what is found and what is created. In a layered, fragmentary approach to making, different ways of painting are combined to expose the materiality of the other, referencing artists such as David Salle and Laura Owens.

In her work, photorealism sits next to a painterly brush mark and texture is used to create a trompe l’oeil effect. Illusions bring the surface-matter to the forefront, reminding the viewer that even the photographic elements are still just paint, whilst the objects, of which the spectator can relate to, brings the focus back on to the subject. As a result, neither the subject-matter nor the surface-matter is privileged over the other

Accolades

BA Fine Art, City & Guilds of London Art School, 2019.

Awards: Winner of The Clyde & Co Art Award, London 2019.

Group Exhibition: Exceptional, Collyer Bristow Gallery, London 2019.

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