Tuesday, April 2, 2013

UNDERSTANDING ABSTRACT ART #71





“Aphrodite – Goddess of Creativity and Love”
In the Image of Goddesses Series
(Acrylic) 
Size: 90x120cm

ABOUT THIS PAINTING

 In my last post (#70) I discussed my painting of “Hephaestus – God of the Anvil and Forge”.  This week I will explain my painting of “Aphrodite – Goddess of Creativity and Love”.   Aphrodite was married to Hephaestus.  (Both these deities come from classical Greek myth).  This painting of Aphrodite is meant to symbolize my creative nature.  The painting discussed last week also was about my creativity but from a more masculine angle.

Aphrodite in classical Greek times was the Goddess of creativity and love, similar to Venus in the Roman era.  Central to my learning over the years, has been an understanding of the relationship between spirituality, sexuality and love.  As a painter I feel that it is important for me to keep all three in harmony and balanced in order for the creative process to flow.  As I age, I can look back over my life and see how these three aspirations play an important part in the way my life has unfolds. 

My recently published book “The Power of Creating” (in Hard Cover at cost or download free http://au.blurb.com/bookstore/detail/3457759 ) gives an account of this in a 40 year retrospective of my art work.  It also gives insight into my creative and personal process.

Female sexuality is central to the allure of the Goddess Aphrodite.  My painting of her shows female sexuality and potential depicted as an ovum pulsating with life.

Artistic techniques used in the painting:

The oval shape is symbolic of female potency - the female life force given form – the egg.  Eggs, large and small, are all rounded and oval.  The form of an egg is one of the strongest of structures, though it looks fragile, beautiful and mysterious.  I attempt to capture in this painting that mystery which is symbolic of potential life.  

I have selected warm colours that are also soft and feminine.  The pinks, purples and apricots are balanced with the cooler aqua – an analogous pallet.  Low and mid-tones are used throughout and the composition is balanced by the strong red border, on the top and left side, and the large oval in the lower left.

Although I have used acrylic paint, I have applied it in glazes and have utilized line more than I normally do, so as to get a feeling of pulsating movement.  This represents the potential for life that an ovum holds.  However without the male counterpart there cannot be life.
In order to better understand what I am trying to convey in this post, my painting of Aphrodite should be read along with last week’s post (#70) on Hephaestus, her husband.  
Abstract art is the best way for me to convey the complex meaning behind my paintings.  Other paintings from In the Image of Goddesses” series have been discussed in posts Nos.9, 15, 44, 62, and 63 (though this is not the complete set). The series represents this woman’s examination and exploration of herself, and in that respect, all the paintings in this series fall into the genre of portrait.  The overall series is an examination and honouring of myself and the whole series can be enjoyed in more lyrical detail in my book.  Have a look – its free to download.

No comments:

Post a Comment