Phantom Series : Broken Utopia
Broken Utopia
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How long shall we hope? To halt one's hope, does it mean one is weak? Must we hope all the time? How powerful is our hope?
These questions rush through one's mind like a high current flow of the river. This art isn't to necessarily provide answers but to help us navigate through these questions and more. Probably, there are some hope one must hold on to and consolidate whilst there are others one must let go. Perhaps, we live when some hope are buried while we die when we kill some kind of hope. Sometimes, to live is to be hopeful. I believe there are hope shattered we must mend again while others are better left in smithereens. How do we know the difference? That's the difficulty. Things aren't always in black and white. Sometimes, we just have to trust our guts. Sometimes we have to elevate our heart's sight. Who knows?
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In the depiction of the art. The upward look on the subject's face signifies hope. The dark background further emphasizes the hope. That is, despite the dark surroundings depicting a state of despair, her gaze still fixes upward. I used a shattered effect on the face to represent the hope broken. Therefore, the situation is in a state of either rearranging the smithereens to an organized picture of hope or leaving it that way as the art tries to explain.
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Art : Surrealism
Title : Broken Utopia
Dimension : 2 by 3 ft
Medium : Charcoal on smooth pelican paper
Artist : Macaulay Barnabas
.
How long shall we hope? To halt one's hope, does it mean one is weak? Must we hope all the time? How powerful is our hope?
These questions rush through one's mind like a high current flow of the river. This art isn't to necessarily provide answers but to help us navigate through these questions and more. Probably, there are some hope one must hold on to and consolidate whilst there are others one must let go. Perhaps, we live when some hope are buried while we die when we kill some kind of hope. Sometimes, to live is to be hopeful. I believe there are hope shattered we must mend again while others are better left in smithereens. How do we know the difference? That's the difficulty. Things aren't always in black and white. Sometimes, we just have to trust our guts. Sometimes we have to elevate our heart's sight. Who knows?
.
In the depiction of the art. The upward look on the subject's face signifies hope. The dark background further emphasizes the hope. That is, despite the dark surroundings depicting a state of despair, her gaze still fixes upward. I used a shattered effect on the face to represent the hope broken. Therefore, the situation is in a state of either rearranging the smithereens to an organized picture of hope or leaving it that way as the art tries to explain.
.
Art : Surrealism
Title : Broken Utopia
Dimension : 2 by 3 ft
Medium : Charcoal on smooth pelican paper
Artist : Macaulay Barnabas
Things aren't always in black & white indeed... This is really great...
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot, George.
DeleteCool...
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot.
DeleteWell-done Doc. More wisdom and knowledge to you
ReplyDeleteThanks a lot.
Delete