Created and Sold by ELYSE DEFOOR
Via Dorso (Installation View) - Mixed Media
Featured In Atlanta, GA
$ On Inquiry
Via Dorso Installation - Firmanento, Carne and Tempesta (left to right)
Mixed media on translucent film veiled over large-scale photographs
90" H x 60" W x 30" D (draped onto floor)
Via Dorso: Sonnets to Unguarded Moments
"From the outset, it was only from the back.
In portraying the nude male figure, I was not interested in exploring the power and sexuality displayed from the front.
I wanted to see the energy emitted from the side of men they themselves do not see.
For months, I drew and painted men’s backs from memory. Although pleased with those earlier works, I grew frustrated because I had no visual reference that was better than what was inside my head.
Finally I asked my dear friend to be my model. Three months later, he agreed.
I photographed him in two sessions. Cautiously intimate in those unguarded moments, we pushed forward past any gesture of cliche.
It was exciting to be so present with him, a union of like minds exploring his beauty and grace. The openness to our vulnerability and the willingness to accept it, was a magical thing.
Then began the solitary work of responding to the captured images. I covered the photos with veils and added my marks, expressing my connection. I was surprised to find that instead of hiding the figure, the veils actually revealed.
These “visual sonnets” are my love poems to the full range of emotions inherent to being a Man, as a waterfall, reflecting light in dark, an outward force, underscored by inward grace."
Mixed media on translucent film veiled over large-scale photographs
90" H x 60" W x 30" D (draped onto floor)
Via Dorso: Sonnets to Unguarded Moments
"From the outset, it was only from the back.
In portraying the nude male figure, I was not interested in exploring the power and sexuality displayed from the front.
I wanted to see the energy emitted from the side of men they themselves do not see.
For months, I drew and painted men’s backs from memory. Although pleased with those earlier works, I grew frustrated because I had no visual reference that was better than what was inside my head.
Finally I asked my dear friend to be my model. Three months later, he agreed.
I photographed him in two sessions. Cautiously intimate in those unguarded moments, we pushed forward past any gesture of cliche.
It was exciting to be so present with him, a union of like minds exploring his beauty and grace. The openness to our vulnerability and the willingness to accept it, was a magical thing.
Then began the solitary work of responding to the captured images. I covered the photos with veils and added my marks, expressing my connection. I was surprised to find that instead of hiding the figure, the veils actually revealed.
These “visual sonnets” are my love poems to the full range of emotions inherent to being a Man, as a waterfall, reflecting light in dark, an outward force, underscored by inward grace."
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