Venus Challenged
Oil on Canvas,
US$
598
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Venus Challenged
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Details
Oil on Canvas
W: 900mm x H: 600mm x D: 45mm
W: 35" x H: 24" x D: 2"
This work is
unframed
Price
US$ 598
Scale
About "Venus Challenged"
The Venus series deals with womanhood. It tells of how human society have become unappreciative of what womanhood used to stand for; broadly speaking, we have, in many ways, lost care-givers and mothers and we have replaced them with aggressive, career-serving sex-goddesses. The central image of the Venus is based on the most famous fertility symbol of all, the Venus of Willendorf [0x1] with slight adaptations to become a more universal symbol of womanhood and fertility. Challenging Venus: This one man[0x1]s response. The egg-shell of his mind (once again a container) features the image of a man - naked and vulnerable. This image of his true nature beams forth the confrontational energy towards the idea of the Venus; questioning the state of things past and present.
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View all 129 works by Eric Möller
About Eric
About the Artist -- (Article by: Griffin von Ritter for Art Busker Int.) Eric Moller has been exhibiting his works since 1995. He has had eight solo exhibitions, taken part in numerous group exhibitions, was nominated twice as finalist in the PPC Sculpture Competition and was granted a SANAVA residency at the Cite Internationale des Arts in Paris, France. On this occasion he wrote a book about his experiences (86 Days in the City of Lights) which was subsequently published both locally and internationally. He is a teacher of Visual Arts and Design and lives a quiet life with his three dogs in the East of Pretoria.
Moller grew up in 'what was then a small sea-side town'. He hated school and was uncomfortable with family-life so he mostly headed off on his own. When he wasn't bounding after butterflies or accosting arachnids, he spent his time in the many secret spaces between the rocks by the sea, where he snorkeled and always found himself fascinated and utterly in awe of the unexpected and exotic life-forms that existed beneath the surface of the ocean. 'Had it not been that the Art Bug bit me early in my life, I would have been a Bug Scientist - no doubt!' he says. 'It is my early fascination with Natural History in its entirety that still drives my art today. In my art the expression is more condensed, though, in that it deals with a search for - or maybe an understanding of - the essence of the life force. It's about what makes us aware, feel, twitch and respond... about what makes us happy and sad; all in a very human, inexplicable way. On the one hand it is the love of life, the mystery, the magic, the incomprehensible mind-bending BIGNESS of it all... on the other it is the sadness I have felt all my life; the sense that there is an inescapable great emptiness following close behind, lapping at my heels.' There is surely so much more that can be said about the man and his work. There are unfathomable depths that even he finds difficult and perplexing to explore, there is that scientific understanding of the stuff that holds us all together, there are so many more questions and there have most probably never really been answers. I leave you with this: When you look at the works of Eric Moller, first see the colours, the tight composition, and the lines that twirl and contort in seductive dances and always lead you back to a new place - another place to start off from. Observe the pulsating shadows that entice you to search for more. See LIFE! See his technical mastery of the various mediums he uses. Now see 'the void', creeping up from behind. Somewhere in all of that celebration lurks something shadowy and cryptic... something that threatens to suck life, love, beauty and joy from all that we know. It is mostly announced (quite paradoxically) by the deepest tone of Moller's favourite colour - Prussian Blue. As your mind boggles and wrestles with unexpected contortions, the artist does his magic - and you can always depend on it: the colours, lines, textures and all those other things that first you saw and that make these works so alluring grab a hold of you again and pull you back from the precipice. Suddenly there is joy. Life has meaning again. These things, and probably other stuff we have not yet considered, make this artist's work poignantly important. *** Eric Moller has works in private and corporate collections in South Africa, The United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, Germany, Portugal, The United States, The Netherlands and Singapore.
Price Range
US$ 147-3,681
Email
Exhibitions
Eight solo exhibitions and fourteen group shows.
Education
University of Pretoria
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