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bon humour Drawing

Michael Pierce

United States

Drawing, Graphite on Paper

Size: 23 W x 23 H x 0.1 D in

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Originally listed for $560
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About The Artwork

For many years, I’ve been working on a series based mainly on my own documentary photographs of prize-winning rabbits from various rabbit shows, including the Virginia State Fair. In the transition from photographs to drawings, the rabbits have been freed of their cages, and the gesture of the hand-drawn mark takes precedence over photographic representation. “Who doesn’t like a rabbit?” I have asked, knowing full well that there are those who find these images too safe and sweet. Obviously, the image of a rabbit is a loaded image. Rabbits carry symbolic meaning that varies widely and is often contradictory. They are safe, soft, and cuddly and therefore an appropriate symbol for the child in each of us. But they are also fearful, shy and vulnerable, and sometimes prey for the hunter. At the same time, they remind us of our own sexuality, desire, and abundance speaking to the adult in us. Ultimately, rabbits may symbolically assure us of hope and happiness for the future with new life and new beginnings. The rabbit as trickster and the artist as trickster also play an important part in my work. I frequently include French words and phrases, using Google translator to translate random phrases, descriptions of rabbit behavior and thoughts about the symbolism of rabbits into French, a language I neither speak nor understand.

Details & Dimensions

Drawing:Graphite on Paper

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:23 W x 23 H x 0.1 D in

Shipping & Returns

Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

Born 1950. Virginia, USA. As early as I can remember Ive been drawing. At first I drew mainly on the end-papers of the books - especially that set of encyclopedias my mom and dad got from the traveling salesman. In my teens, I spent Wednesdays during my summers off from school going with my grandmother to the weekly meetings of the Culpeper Art Group. They were doing batik, Japanese sumi painting, splashing enamel paints on old boards, drawing still lifes, doing hard edge abstractions, painting Culpepers historical buildings before they got torn down, and on and on. I have scrapbooks full of newspaper clippings about these old ladies. In the early 70s I got involved in the Floyd Avenue Cultural Center, a group of artists making movies, creating happenings, etc. In the 70s and early 80s I took staged and found-object photographs and created slide shows to entertain guests invited to my home. I also used some of these slide shows as backdrops for bands playing music at Little Sisters of the Poor. In the mid-80s I met John Morgan and began using oil pastels. As first I drew mainly food and rabbits and people. Between 1991 and 2000 I basically stopped making art. I was tired of people asking me to draw their pets or their portraits. Ron, my partner of over 40 years now, and I bought our first house together. Instead of art making, I channeled my creativity into the house, my relationship, and into my day-job in human resources. In early 2000 I began drawing men - mainly men kissing other men. I believe its important for people to see men kissing. We have Rodins kiss, and its a man and woman naked in embrace and kissing. But we dont have images of men kissing. From 2004 - 2005 I completed a series that I called Simple Equations (after a song title by a British group named Madness). These large oil pastel and graphite pieces addressed the power of shadows and how they allow us to see lightness. They were each derived from found photographs. The main pieces were based on news photos of Aaron McKinney and Russell Henderson; they are the two young men who murdered Matthew Sheppard, a gay college student, in Laramie, Wyoming in 1998. These were large oil pastel drawings, mostly 43 x 43, sometimes paired with printed text. The words werent meant to be captions, but they did help tell the story. I wanted people to have to look at Aaron and Russells faces, but I also wanted them to know what they did.

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