Freedom (2018) Painting by Laurent Nurisso

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One of a kind
Certificate of Authenticity included
This artwork appears in 5 collections
This work was first shown in a collective show in Vienna in September 2018 organised in conjunction with UK based ArtCan. “Wien ruft!“ is the name of a song from pop icon Falco from Vienna - this year celebrates the 20th anniversary of his death. The Title of the exhibition “Vienna Calling”, is to be seen that Vienna is in need and needs new Art.[...]
This work was first shown in a collective show in Vienna in September 2018 organised in conjunction with UK based ArtCan. “Wien ruft!“ is the name of a song from pop icon Falco from Vienna - this year celebrates the 20th anniversary of his death. The Title of the exhibition “Vienna Calling”, is to be seen that Vienna is in need and needs new Art. The basic concept is that Falco is the reference to Vienna, but there are many international artists who have positively influenced many generations and made them think. Most of the topics were about freedom, provocation, rebellion, decadence, against a conservative narrow-minded society.

This work challenges the notion that whoever you are, straight or gay, whatever the colour of your skin, politics, religion, racism & hate destroys and changes lives. Our liberty is fragile & can be taken away in a second, just like balancing stones collapsing. I deliberately want to be provocative about this work.

NB/ the work is three canvasses joined together with a fixing. The size shown is approxiamate. For more information - please contact me. Oil paint on custom made canvas, wood and linen.

Related themes

FalcoSosmediterraneeHelpFreedomFight

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My work seeks to illuminate some of the darker aspects of appropriation and transformation which occur every day in our culture. While our idols and role models are commercialized and regurgitated as throwaway[...]

My work seeks to illuminate some of the darker aspects of appropriation and transformation which occur every day in our culture. While our idols and role models are commercialized and regurgitated as throwaway products and unrecognizable ideologies, my work presents images built around, and from, the elements of “make believe” and story-telling. The observer is challenged to confront these pieces at both an abstract and figurative level, to construct new meanings from old symbols, and to reclaim lost meanings from the corporate structures which have over-written them. It is through this process of individualism, both in creation and interpretation, that I seek to find our shared commonality, and break down the barriers which others have created.

Whilst my work may appear at first glance to be inspired by either pop-art or street-art culture, I aim to tell new stories from what appears to be typical stereotypes. I like to re-appropriate for myself toys, products, signage from a common background knowledge -then add my own memories of places I’ve been to and transpose these into a brash today’s world. A new story, a new meaning perhaps.

I'm interested by how we’ve created false idols and use these stereotypes for our own needs; be that an ideology or just for some new commercial gain. In fact from very early religious times to today's consumerism, we have always liked ‘make belief’ and story telling. I find this idea at times quite repulsive and obstructive, yet at the same time it’s compelling. Like fast food, it’s can be quite disgusting and yet attractive all at the same time.

How can a plastic doll, an action figure or a comic book hero, merely innocent toys or stories at their creation, have become role models. Or commercial signs selling a product or service from a bygone era, be perceived as full of vintage charm.
Then there is the skull, one of the most recognizable spiritual symbols since the Renaissance. It’s become an urban, rebellious symbol, sympathetic and fun, almost detached from its true meaning of death.

I like to give the observer an opportunity to interpret in their own way; get them to venture outside their comfort zone; confront them with a fun, fantasy world that sits between abstract and figurative observations; blurring all the barriers and frontiers that exist between us.

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