honorable mention
Rachel Wolfe norwayPhoto © Rachel Wolfe
title
Currere I
printed area
110.94 x 151.1 cm ( 43.7 x 59.5 in )
Currere I is a image in the Tides chapter of the body of work: Human Needs. Chapters in Human Needs are: Tides, Ultraviolet Forest, (your sweet way). Works within the chapters are in diptych, triptych, polyptych, and monolith forms. Each chapter conveys a story on the relationship between vision and body, meditating on themes of nature, intuition, beauty, and desire. Awards related to works in Human Needs: Omniscient is one of the Monolithic Images, awarded first place by the jury in the Imaging New Eurasia exhibition in Gwangju, South Korea in 2016. Human Needs recently gained representation in 2017 by The Print Atelier in Montreal, Canada.
Her work has been collected and exhibited throughout the United States, Europe, and Asia. Awards and scholarships are: First place by the jury, Imagining New Eurasia exhibition in Gwanju, South Korea. Woelffer scholarship, academic merit award from Otis College of Art and Design, Academic scholarship for sociology study in Matsuyama Japan, Historic Pathways winner from Indiana State University.
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entry description
Currere I, 2016, 120 x 160 x .5 cm, film photography, digital composition and archival ink printprinted area
110.94 x 151.1 cm ( 43.7 x 59.5 in )
Currere I is a image in the Tides chapter of the body of work: Human Needs. Chapters in Human Needs are: Tides, Ultraviolet Forest, (your sweet way). Works within the chapters are in diptych, triptych, polyptych, and monolith forms. Each chapter conveys a story on the relationship between vision and body, meditating on themes of nature, intuition, beauty, and desire. Awards related to works in Human Needs: Omniscient is one of the Monolithic Images, awarded first place by the jury in the Imaging New Eurasia exhibition in Gwangju, South Korea in 2016. Human Needs recently gained representation in 2017 by The Print Atelier in Montreal, Canada.
about the photographer
Rachel Wolfe is an artist that sees the body as the generative force in cognition. Ontology, labor, desire, and movement are the basis of her interdisciplinary work through a structuralist process -this structure is based on an understanding of nature cultivated through the pragmatic practices in five-element theory and the internal arts. Wolfe works to immerse human senses, while nurturing a reverence for beauty. The final artworks are realised by referencing site-specific histories within peculiar, material choices. Her life’s work is to make visible the myth of the psychological and physical divide, through conveying the relationship between Vision and Conception. She exhibits and works internationally on private, commercial, and consulting projects.Her work has been collected and exhibited throughout the United States, Europe, and Asia. Awards and scholarships are: First place by the jury, Imagining New Eurasia exhibition in Gwanju, South Korea. Woelffer scholarship, academic merit award from Otis College of Art and Design, Academic scholarship for sociology study in Matsuyama Japan, Historic Pathways winner from Indiana State University.
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