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F T Kettering

ArtistUSA

  • In Memory artwork by F T Kettering - art listed for sale on Artplode
  • In Memory artwork by F T Kettering

About Artist:

"He studied their gift in the moonlight: a small wooden disk hanging from a leather cord.  A labyrinth had been carved into one face of the disk; the other face held a mirror.  Turning the pendant from side to side, he caught the full moon in the tiny mirror."       Kettering, Labyrinth and Moon

About Artwork:

On many Greek gravestones, the living and the dead share a parting handclasp.  On others, a woman gazes into a mirror.  Here the sculptor brings these two conventions together, while also tilting the mirror toward the viewer.

We look at Mika.  Dion looks at Mika.  She looks at him and at herself and at us.  Mika is more subject than object, engaging at once her past life, present condition, and future memory.

F T Kettering

In Memory

  • 2017
  • 50 x 20 inches
  • Fine Art Category: digital
  • Medium: pigment print
  • Origin: USA
  • Signed: Signed verso
  • Comments:

    Please click on the image to see it full-screen.

    In Memory is a new work, never shown before.

    The work will ship in a sturdy mailing tube, as a high-quality, semi-gloss digital inkjet print, 50" wide by 20" tall.   Signed en verso with my name and monogram.

    Buyers are encouraged to choose their own format for framing and display.

     

  • Visit Website
  • Price: $3,000.00 USD
  • Seller: F T Kettering, USA

Contact Seller...

  • Artplode ID: 3762
  • Artplode Seller ID: 1520

About Artist:

"He studied their gift in the moonlight: a small wooden disk hanging from a leather cord.  A labyrinth had been carved into one face of the disk; the other face held a mirror.  Turning the pendant from side to side, he caught the full moon in the tiny mirror."       Kettering, Labyrinth and Moon

About Artwork:

On many Greek gravestones, the living and the dead share a parting handclasp.  On others, a woman gazes into a mirror.  Here the sculptor brings these two conventions together, while also tilting the mirror toward the viewer.

We look at Mika.  Dion looks at Mika.  She looks at him and at herself and at us.  Mika is more subject than object, engaging at once her past life, present condition, and future memory.







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