Oli Epp - Black Swan, Signed/Numbered (Semiose Edition)
Oli Epp
BLACK SWAN, 2020
Text: Mara Hoberman
7-page, hard-bound leporello, accompanied by a 24-page booklet
11.02 x 9.84 inch ( 28 x 25 cm )
Fine condition
Oli Epp’s Black Swan leporello, published by Semiose, is an object destined for iconophiles as well as those simply obsessed with images. In its imitation-leather, concertina binding, Oli Epp’s triptych of Black Swan paintings unfold majestically, just like the wings of this magnificent bird.
This beautiful object recalls the tradition of portable, winged altarpieces, in vogue during the Middle Ages, and is further proof (if any were needed) of Oli Epp’s dedication to the historicity of painting. In the booklet accompanying the publication, Maria Hoberman points out that: “if the artist’s practice, subject matter and aesthetic seem preoccupied with the virtual, his chosen medium is decidedly analog. Working with oils and acrylics on canvas, Epp updates the notional window described in Leon Battista Alberti’s seminal fifteenth century treatise, De Pictura (On Painting), for the twenty-first century. Relating the picture plane to a screen as opposed to a window, Epp evokes the digital landscape in traditional painterly terms.”
Mara Hoberman also brings up the connection between the Black Swan series and Renaissance paintings by artists such as Perugino and Masaccio, among others, and their use of “a combination of geometry, realism and symbolism to convincingly represent religious subjects as tangible and concrete, yet also sublime and ethereal.” The three canvasses of the Black Swan series are realistic, disturbing and studded with abstract and symbolic elements such as an egg, a pearl, broken glass and ladybirds, each in turn accompanying the swan on stage.
Published as a limited edition of 300 numbered copies, signed by the artist, this medium-format leporello (9 ½ x 11 inches) is intended for the collector, to be put on display, admired and revered.
Oli Epp
BLACK SWAN, 2020
Text: Mara Hoberman
7-page, hard-bound leporello, accompanied by a 24-page booklet
11.02 x 9.84 inch ( 28 x 25 cm )
Fine condition
Oli Epp’s Black Swan leporello, published by Semiose, is an object destined for iconophiles as well as those simply obsessed with images. In its imitation-leather, concertina binding, Oli Epp’s triptych of Black Swan paintings unfold majestically, just like the wings of this magnificent bird.
This beautiful object recalls the tradition of portable, winged altarpieces, in vogue during the Middle Ages, and is further proof (if any were needed) of Oli Epp’s dedication to the historicity of painting. In the booklet accompanying the publication, Maria Hoberman points out that: “if the artist’s practice, subject matter and aesthetic seem preoccupied with the virtual, his chosen medium is decidedly analog. Working with oils and acrylics on canvas, Epp updates the notional window described in Leon Battista Alberti’s seminal fifteenth century treatise, De Pictura (On Painting), for the twenty-first century. Relating the picture plane to a screen as opposed to a window, Epp evokes the digital landscape in traditional painterly terms.”
Mara Hoberman also brings up the connection between the Black Swan series and Renaissance paintings by artists such as Perugino and Masaccio, among others, and their use of “a combination of geometry, realism and symbolism to convincingly represent religious subjects as tangible and concrete, yet also sublime and ethereal.” The three canvasses of the Black Swan series are realistic, disturbing and studded with abstract and symbolic elements such as an egg, a pearl, broken glass and ladybirds, each in turn accompanying the swan on stage.
Published as a limited edition of 300 numbered copies, signed by the artist, this medium-format leporello (9 ½ x 11 inches) is intended for the collector, to be put on display, admired and revered.
Oli Epp
BLACK SWAN, 2020
Text: Mara Hoberman
7-page, hard-bound leporello, accompanied by a 24-page booklet
11.02 x 9.84 inch ( 28 x 25 cm )
Fine condition
Oli Epp’s Black Swan leporello, published by Semiose, is an object destined for iconophiles as well as those simply obsessed with images. In its imitation-leather, concertina binding, Oli Epp’s triptych of Black Swan paintings unfold majestically, just like the wings of this magnificent bird.
This beautiful object recalls the tradition of portable, winged altarpieces, in vogue during the Middle Ages, and is further proof (if any were needed) of Oli Epp’s dedication to the historicity of painting. In the booklet accompanying the publication, Maria Hoberman points out that: “if the artist’s practice, subject matter and aesthetic seem preoccupied with the virtual, his chosen medium is decidedly analog. Working with oils and acrylics on canvas, Epp updates the notional window described in Leon Battista Alberti’s seminal fifteenth century treatise, De Pictura (On Painting), for the twenty-first century. Relating the picture plane to a screen as opposed to a window, Epp evokes the digital landscape in traditional painterly terms.”
Mara Hoberman also brings up the connection between the Black Swan series and Renaissance paintings by artists such as Perugino and Masaccio, among others, and their use of “a combination of geometry, realism and symbolism to convincingly represent religious subjects as tangible and concrete, yet also sublime and ethereal.” The three canvasses of the Black Swan series are realistic, disturbing and studded with abstract and symbolic elements such as an egg, a pearl, broken glass and ladybirds, each in turn accompanying the swan on stage.
Published as a limited edition of 300 numbered copies, signed by the artist, this medium-format leporello (9 ½ x 11 inches) is intended for the collector, to be put on display, admired and revered.