Created and Sold by Sarupa Sidaarth
Maze vs Labyrinth - Paintings
Price $11,000
In Stock Now
Shipping: FedEx 7-10 days
Price $500 Shipping in the US, ask the creator about international shipping.
Estimated Arrival: December 29, 2024
Shipping time, cost, dimensions and weight are approximate. Please contact me for expedited shipping, additional item shipping cost or international shipping.
Handmade
Woman Owned
Made In USA
Made To Order
Dimensions | Weight |
---|---|
30H x 60W x 2D in 76.2H x 152.4W x 5.08D cm | 9.07 kg 20 lb |
Mixed media on wood panel.
Size: Diptych. 30 x 60 inches.
Series: Feast of fire.
Description: On my birthday, October 2, 2020 I received a cosmic gift. I lost 15 years’ worth of art, more than a hundred paintings to the Glass Fire in St. Helena, California. Everything we owned was reduced to ashes in the wildfire. My response to the profound and unimaginable loss was to accept it on the spot. I detached from my former script and stopped flirting with permanence. What seems fixed is actually fluid. I look for no meaning; it cannot be understood as an isolated incident. It is an integrated part of the whole. I found myself in a dynamic interchange between the local and the global, the personal and the universal. Today a significant part of my artistic legacy survives only in digital format with no tangible form and no comprehensive record of experimental work or markers of creative evolution. The images in these paintings are of destroyed paintings. I confront life’s non-negotiable curve balls by making a ritual out of creativity. The unfathomable and the indescribable can only be expressed through art. What my past has shaped me into has come into play. Today I view my life path as a mystical labyrinth, a unicursal or single, continuous path. It leads you towards the center and out if you make a conscious choice to move forward. Conversely, a maze, its multicursal counterpart is a convoluted network of divergent paths with unpredictable outcomes. The maze that I designed is not a true maze. Only partially accessible, it is an observation of current times. The maze symbolizes confusion, the labyrinth contemplation. After 2020, which one are you walking through?
Size: Diptych. 30 x 60 inches.
Series: Feast of fire.
Description: On my birthday, October 2, 2020 I received a cosmic gift. I lost 15 years’ worth of art, more than a hundred paintings to the Glass Fire in St. Helena, California. Everything we owned was reduced to ashes in the wildfire. My response to the profound and unimaginable loss was to accept it on the spot. I detached from my former script and stopped flirting with permanence. What seems fixed is actually fluid. I look for no meaning; it cannot be understood as an isolated incident. It is an integrated part of the whole. I found myself in a dynamic interchange between the local and the global, the personal and the universal. Today a significant part of my artistic legacy survives only in digital format with no tangible form and no comprehensive record of experimental work or markers of creative evolution. The images in these paintings are of destroyed paintings. I confront life’s non-negotiable curve balls by making a ritual out of creativity. The unfathomable and the indescribable can only be expressed through art. What my past has shaped me into has come into play. Today I view my life path as a mystical labyrinth, a unicursal or single, continuous path. It leads you towards the center and out if you make a conscious choice to move forward. Conversely, a maze, its multicursal counterpart is a convoluted network of divergent paths with unpredictable outcomes. The maze that I designed is not a true maze. Only partially accessible, it is an observation of current times. The maze symbolizes confusion, the labyrinth contemplation. After 2020, which one are you walking through?
Have more questions about this item?