Love Me; Self Portrait 1-3; Self Portrait

Authors

  • John Graham Australia

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21153/ps2015vol1no1art459

Abstract

These self-portraits explore the artist’s changing conception of self by presenting the self as a mutable entity without an essential core. The works also function as an index of the artist’s self-image, which spans a wide range of moods, emotions and dispositions. Love Me is characterized by bold, emotive phantasmagorias that explore the artist as a monstrous entity, a beast motivated by primal drives and appetites. Self Portrait 1-3 also induces a primordial resonance through its references to tribal art. These sculptures present the artist as an idol or effigy with mystical properties. This particular investigation into the artistic self references the inflated artistic ego, and role it plays in giving the artist special, almost shamanic, powers. Self-Portrait comprises of drawings manipulated to produce a video animation that tracks the artist’s perception of himself over a period of three years. This work reveals an ongoing interrogation of the relationship between self and artistic personae, which is evident in the animation that dramatizes the connections between the artist’s paintings and drawings.

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Author Biography

  • John Graham, Australia

    John Graham was born in Perth, Western Australia and now lives and works in Melbourne. He has been exhibiting his paintings since 1986 and participated in many solo and group exhibitions.  An expressionist, his persistent themes are the landscape and the figure. John is represented by Jackman Gallery, Hawthorn Gallery, Tusk Gallery and Without Pier Gallery. 

Published

2015-04-30

Issue

Section

Creative Practice

How to Cite

Love Me; Self Portrait 1-3; Self Portrait. (2015). Persona Studies, 1(1). https://doi.org/10.21153/ps2015vol1no1art459