| Minerva in Pearls, Sarah Myers |
With
her gentle smile, lowered eyes, pearl necklace and tall helmet, this
sculpture remains one of my favourites I have made, and my largest.
She is life-scale or perhaps a little more.
| Minerva in Pearls, Sarah Myers Close-up |
She
was inspired from a sixteenth-century portrait of a young Dutch
woman, Margarita Trip. The artist Ferdinand Bol dressed her in
costume as Minerva and portrayed Margarita teaching her younger
sister Maria Trip. I think in my sculpture I have used the
mythological reference slightly more seriously and as a more intregal
part - not indeed as homage to the Greek deity Athena (Minerva), but
abstractly in praise of wisdom and the wisdom of elder sisters in
particular.
| Minerva in Pearls, Sarah Myers Sculpture in stoneware |
A
sculpture this size takes a huge amount of clay. In this case, she
consists of stoneware I mixed by hand and kneaded
carefully to remove air pockets. The recipe was designed by my
sister Amy Myers - it is a clay of some resistance and strength even
in its raw form. The sculpture was then built over a period of three
days. I work directly into the clay with a rapidity which is partly
to avoid the damage that too-early drying can create, but also to
preserve the spontaneity and immediacy of the human touch.
| Minerva in Pearls, side view |
All
art and photography by Sarah Myers
| Minerva in Pearls, Sarah Myers Detail of face and helmet |
| Minerva in Pearls, Sarah Myers |
ειναι ενα ΑΡΙΣΤΟΥΡΓΗΜΑ!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteφιλακια!!!!!
αγγελικη
Thank you with all my heart, dear Aggeliki! Your kind words are treasured! Sending smiles and wishes for a lovely day,
ReplyDeleteSarah