The Doll was Cunning but so was she, (Baba Yaga)

$2,000

Emma Gardner

Trace Monotype Oil Stick, Linocut and Silver Thread on Salvaged Indian Textiles
Photo Credit: Thomas Oliver
140cm x 96cm
2020

Description

Using the Russian folklore tale, Baba Yaga as a reference point. I implicate my figure as both author and subject in this work, to complicate the relationship between truth and fiction and subvert some of its grand narratives.
Emma Gardner is an inter-disciplinary artist whose practice is based in drawing. She loves to use process driven, laborious techniques and experiment with a variety of textiles. Her work is a curious enquiry into the human condition that she frames within paganistic ritual or folklore tales.

Through the practice of drawing her work engages with process, labour and self-portraiture to comment on the human condition. She references the witch archetype and folklore tales to engage with ideas about ritual, ceremony, and a re-connection to nature, self and spirit.

Gardner has exhibited in Brisbane, Sydney, Melbourne and Darwin. She has carried out residencies and research in India, England, Spain and South Africa and held an exhibition in Vienna, Austria. Gardner is the recipient of Australian Government research and Arts Queensland grants. She received a Bachelor of Fine Arts with Honours from Queensland Colleague of Art in 2016.

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