Seventeen , 2020
42 x 59.4 cm (h x w)
Pencil and gold leaf on paper

Seventeen is a womb-like image. We are born and leave the Garden of Eden, a realm of support, nourishment and protection. Our birth is a great trauma. After that we grow and are exposed to every kind of danger and opportunity. Do we crave peace and protection, or do we embrace risk? Recently we have been bombarded with the statistics of risk, as if Covid-19 is the first time that we are in danger as a species. But every day is and always has been a danger. In this drawing a human being transforms from foetus into adult. It is a process that I have often captured in my art, even in large scale sculptures such as Emergence where a human being emerges from the earth into this life, into the light, air, danger and thrill of being alive. We are always living on the knife-edge, whether we know it or not. There is a great beauty, inevitability and an instinctive, unstoppable force that is life and growth, like some kind of vortex. But within all of us there is this memory of the peace of the womb, it comes back in moments of meditation, travel and sleep.

Exposé par :

Ben Uri Research Unit

Autres œuvres de David Breuer-Weil (b. 1965)

Six , 2020
42 x 59.4 cm (h x w)
Pencil and gold leaf on paper
Ben Uri Research Unit
Five , 2020
42 x 59.4 cm (h x w)
Pencil and gold leaf on paper
Ben Uri Research Unit
Four , 2020
42 x 59.4 cm (h x w)
Pencil and gold leaf on paper
Ben Uri Research Unit
Three , 2020
42 x 59.4 cm (h x w)
Pencil and gold leaf on paper
Ben Uri Research Unit
Two , 2020
59.4 x 42 cm (h x w)
Pencil and gold leaf on paper
Ben Uri Research Unit

Plus de Ben Uri Research Unit

Brooklyn Heights
130 x 130 cm (h x w)
Acrylic on canvas
Ben Uri Research Unit
Self-Portrait in Red , 1951-58
76 x 55 cm (h x w)
Oil on paper
Ben Uri Research Unit
Summer Heat Sunset in Yugoslavia , 1977
87 x 117 cm (h x w)
silkscreen print
Ben Uri Research Unit
Self-Portrait , c. 1990
Oil on canvas
Ben Uri Research Unit
Circular Diamond , 1969
76.2 x 76.2 cm (h x w)
Folded newspaper
Ben Uri Research Unit