Portrait of the Viewer as a Butterfly

Medium

oil on canvas

Dimensions

20"x 20"

Cost

$1,500

Description

In my life and art practice I consider the qualities of separation and oneness. Are we existentially isolated within our separate bodies, are we integral parts of a collective whole that we are only obliquely aware of, or are we simultaneously both?

These deep-spaced paintings were inspired by the Hellenistic philosophy of Plotinus, who believed that all beings are intrinsically important pieces of a larger whole, like how every jigsaw piece is necessary to create a full image. The deep skies, which represent the world beyond us, are paired with specific foreground imagery (birds, butterflies, etc.) which are depicted with more detail and specificity than their environments, suggesting that we relate to them as individuals. The deep and near are depicted together in overlapping layers that suggest that although we are individual actors playing out our lives, we are part of a larger system which we can only partially understand from our limited vantage points. My toenail does not know that it is part of me nor that the “I” it is part of likes sitcoms, existential philosophy, and dry wine. We, being so much more than the sum of our body parts, can realize that our understandings of our experiences are limited, and this series plays with the endless possibilities that offers.

My aesthetic visualization of some such possibilities as paintings were inspired by reading about quantum loop theory in the books of Carlo Rovelli, including The Order of Time, and this exhibition’s namesake, Reality is Not What it Seems. In the series multiple versions of the same sky or multiple different skies are depicted within one image, suggesting that multiple understandings of reality could be simultaneously valid.

To create the work in this exhibition I painted several preliminary oil paintings of skies. I had those photographed and I had the photos of them printed on cotton and paper, which I warped, tore, and then photographed. I next took the images of the preliminary paintings, the images of them on manipulated paper and fabric, as well as photos of skies I had painted into previous other paintings and collaged them together digitally in Photoshop. Next, I had those collages printed on canvas. Lastly, I painted more on top of the canvas primarily with oil paint and in some cases acrylic and metal leaf.

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About this Artist

Sarah Jacobs

Sarah Jacobs

Sarah Jacobs is a contemporary artist. Her work has been exhibited in the US and in Europe and she has taken part in artist residencies in Grimma, Germany, Cali, Colombia, and Taos, New Mexico. She has won multiple grants, including the Arts Council England Grant, and her work can be found in public and private collections in the US, UK, and Hong Kong. She has had solo and two person exhibitions in New York City, London, Wrocław, Poland and Bristol, England, among other cities. A large scale reproduction of one of her paintings was displayed at the Pittsburgh International Airport from 2018 - 2019. Born in West Virginia in 1984, Jacobs was raised in Littlestown, Pennsylvania. She was educated in Art History at Gettysburg College and received her MFA from the Hoffberger School of Painting at the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore in 2010. There she studied under Joyce Kozloff and Timothy App. Jacobs moved back to the USA in 2014 after 3 years living in London and Bristol, UK where she became a naturalized British citizen. From 2014 – 2016 she taught art at the University of Maryland and Gettysburg College. She now teaches at Carlow University in Pittsburgh and spends her time there and in New York.
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