The Exile of Rabbit, 2009 - Tricia Cline
About the Work
About The Exile of Rabbit
This sculpture, portraying a nude female posed and seated with a rabbit strapped to her back, is part of the artist's series Exiles in Lower Utopia, which she describes as an "ode to the animals." The sculptures represent the ...Read More
This sculpture, portraying a nude female posed and seated with a rabbit strapped to her back, is part of the artist's series Exiles in Lower Utopia, which she describes as an "ode to the animals." The sculptures represent the metaphysical migration between the animal and human worlds and the quest to discover one's own inner animal.Read Less
About the Artist
About Tricia Cline
Tricia Cline is self taught and has been sculpting from direct observation in the female and animal form for over 20 years. Her small, highly ...Read More
Tricia Cline is self taught and has been sculpting from direct observation in the female and animal form for over 20 years. Her small, highly detailed porcelain clay sculptures are complex metaphors describing our relationship to animals and to ourselves as ... Animals.
Tricia Cline's most recent body of work, Exiles in Lower Utopia, is an ode to the Animal, its ability to perceive, and our return to that perception. Cline writes, "An animal is its very form. Its function is its form. A wolf runs at full speed, a distinct scent or sound alters its direction. The legs, the nose, the ears of the wolf are its function, its bliss. When an animal recognizes another animal it reads with an instinctual eye the character in the form— the essential nature in the form before it. Its text is not a mental concept about what it's looking at but a full-bodied awareness of the shape, smell, movement, and stance of the image in front of it. The language of animals is the language of images. An image is not an idea with a defined meaning, it is itself an animal. This is the ode—to reconnect with our own animal perception. To go beyond the limited mental concepts of who we think we are, to an awareness of oneself that is infinitely more vast.
"The Exiles migrate between the human world and the animal world and carry this awareness on their backs. They are the silent embodiment of this Quest. They understand the language of animals and are self-appointed ambassadors from that world. They are firmly seated, in the language of animals, the language of imagery. They have succeeded by virtue of being."
Courtesy of Ricco/Maresca GalleryRead Less
Tricia Cline's most recent body of work, Exiles in Lower Utopia, is an ode to the Animal, its ability to perceive, and our return to that perception. Cline writes, "An animal is its very form. Its function is its form. A wolf runs at full speed, a distinct scent or sound alters its direction. The legs, the nose, the ears of the wolf are its function, its bliss. When an animal recognizes another animal it reads with an instinctual eye the character in the form— the essential nature in the form before it. Its text is not a mental concept about what it's looking at but a full-bodied awareness of the shape, smell, movement, and stance of the image in front of it. The language of animals is the language of images. An image is not an idea with a defined meaning, it is itself an animal. This is the ode—to reconnect with our own animal perception. To go beyond the limited mental concepts of who we think we are, to an awareness of oneself that is infinitely more vast.
"The Exiles migrate between the human world and the animal world and carry this awareness on their backs. They are the silent embodiment of this Quest. They understand the language of animals and are self-appointed ambassadors from that world. They are firmly seated, in the language of animals, the language of imagery. They have succeeded by virtue of being."
Courtesy of Ricco/Maresca GalleryRead Less
Description
Porcelain sculpture.Shipping
Ships in 10-14 business days.This work is final sale and not eligible for return.
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