Forêt du Bonheur (2024) Painting by Émilie Pauly

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One of a kind
Artwork signed by the artist
Certificate of Authenticity included
Ready to hang
This artwork is framed
This artwork appears in 5 collections
  • Original Artwork (One Of A Kind) Painting, Acrylic on Cardboard
  • Dimensions Height 19.7in, Width 15.8in
  • Artwork's condition The artwork is in perfect condition
  • Framing This artwork is framed
  • Categories Paintings under $5,000 Surrealism Fantasy
Ce tableau, métaphore du bonheur, représente une forêt merveilleuse, peuplée d'arbres vivants, d'oiseaux majestueux, d'écureuils et de créatures imaginaires. Chacun vaque à ses occupations. Certains oiseaux veillent sur leurs œufs, tandis qu'un autre, coquet, se pomponne devant son miroir. Un quatrième rentre pour se mettre au chaud au coin du feu. [...]
Ce tableau, métaphore du bonheur, représente une forêt merveilleuse, peuplée d'arbres vivants, d'oiseaux majestueux, d'écureuils et de créatures imaginaires. Chacun vaque à ses occupations. Certains oiseaux veillent sur leurs œufs, tandis qu'un autre, coquet, se pomponne devant son miroir. Un quatrième rentre pour se mettre au chaud au coin du feu. Deux écureuils perchés dans un hamac observent ce qui se passe au pied des arbres : un couple d'écureuils s'y fait la cour, tandis qu'un troisième s'apprête à monter dans le hamac par l'échelle de corde que ses compagnons ont déroulée pour lui. Un dernier vient ramasser le fruit tombé providentiellement sur le pas de sa porte.
Au premier plan, deux curieux animaux s'apprêtent à plonger dans les nids douillets que leur proposent deux plantes-berceaux. L'arbre-glycine, centre d'intérêt du tableau, semble leur offrir à tous sa protection. Cet arbre magnifique, aux yeux de femme et à la chevelure de fleurs bleues, présente un visage discret, que deux voilages découvrent avec pudeur. Nous sommes ici au cœur de la forêt du bonheur, forêt aux mille couleurs.

Related themes

Forêt ImaginaireCouleurs PastelÉcureuilsOiseauxArbres Imaginaires

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A self-taught artist, I started painting around ten years ago, shortly after my son was born. What led me to painting? Essentially the need to escape a boring working life, to reconnect with my childhood dreams [...]

A self-taught artist, I started painting around ten years ago, shortly after my son was born.

What led me to painting? Essentially the need to escape a boring working life, to reconnect with my childhood dreams at a time when I'd lost my way, and the desire to bring fantasy to everyone (young and old). I was fascinated by the magnificent illustrations I'd discovered in the children's books I'd read to my son, and I'd wanted to create my own images, my own paintings, that would tell the story of my inner world, my dreams, my fantasies, my ideals. I wanted to paint what moved me so that I'd never forget it, so that I'd have a memory of it that I could pass on and communicate.

When I create characters in pencil, I never know in advance what I'm going to draw. I let my hand go and then I see what appears. I like not knowing where my gesture is going to take me. I like to be surprised by what emerges from the first strokes of my pencil. I have the pleasant impression of accessing something of myself that had been lost (in my subconscious or in my distant memories, who knows?).

When I've collected a large enough number of pencil drawings, I look for the ones that could be put together in the same scene, the characters who could have adventures together in the same painting. I spend a lot of time creating these compositions. Once I've worked out which characters have something to say to each other and what setting they could be in, I start painting. I always paint my background first (a natural landscape) and then insert my characters. Everything is done in gouache.

Painting and drawing seemed to me to be more reliable means of expression than texts and speeches. As a linguist by training, I spent a long time working on words and the construction of meaning when I was preparing my doctoral thesis. The polysemy in languages can be so dizzying! Although I'm always sensitive to the poetry of literary works and the beauty of well-crafted arguments, I'm now less moved by them than by the poetry or beauty of images. Words, sometimes misleading or a source of misunderstanding, never colourful enough or on the contrary too saturated, can't do everything. When we no longer know what to say or how to say it, when words fail us, when silence imposes itself, painting, sculpture, music or dance can take over, for the pleasure of all.

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