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My work is about the
exploration of beauty in the commonplace — the things we live with everyday
but fail to notice. There is a redemptive quality to seeing value in things
despite their flaws — indeed, because of their flaws. There is no true,
untainted perfection to be found on this earth, and so those things that
would look perfect seem but a poor shadow of the real thing. Therefore,
those things that look imperfect feel more real, more beautiful, because
there is no pretense. Seeing beauty in the blemished offers hope.
In
the 17th century, still life painters included in their works
objects that remind of the fleeting quality of life, of beauty. The
paintings were enjoyed for their aesthetics but posed a constant reminder
that this world is temporal. They perfected the use of symbols as narrative
while simultaneously drawing attention to ideas of beauty, perfection, and
their opposites. |