Home Artworks Besrat – Good News

Besrat – Good News

2017

Signed Dated Titled Framed

From the series Zweiraumwohnung

Size

45 x 45 cm
18 x 17.72 in

Year

2017

Medium

Paintings

Reference

817d02ab

Edition of Medium Size: 8 + 2 Artist Proof
Edition of Small Size: 8 + 2 Artist Proof
Signature: back
Print: Archival Pigment Print on Hahnemühle Photo Rag® Ultra Smooth
Dibond mount
ArtGlas
Frame in brown

 

Description of the artwork: „Besrat - Good News“

This is an amalgamation of two works by Vermeer. The „maid with milk jar“ and the „young woman reading a letter“, called „maid“ and „letter“ subsequently.

Both paintings show young women in an interior space with a window on the left side, typical for Vermeer. The homage takes two stories, two perspectives so to say. The old subjects from an old master turns to a new meaning. Moreover, there is a media transfer from painting to photography is also ideally suited to Vermeer because

it was in Vermeer‘s time that the artist was supposedly in- terested in camera obscure and optical devices were very much in development.

The two subjects in the Vermeer paintings are very diffe- rent. The settings is the same but different. Both Vermeer‘s interior are domestic but one is in the kitchen and the other is in the bedroom. The maid performs manual labor whereas the lady performs a rather intellectual deed, rea- ding a letter or a note. The difference is action echoes the difference in occupation and in class, just like the deco- ration of the setting shows it. Both actions are performed due to an input from the outside. The lady reads the letter because another person wrote it to her. The maid does the milk thing because another person told her to do so. Each of the women is reacting to an exterior impulse. The girl went to get milk. She stops on the landing of the staircase, opposite a window, to read something on a smartphone. As in the Vermeer we do not know what she reads, how she will react or from whom the message is. We also do not know who (or if somebody) told her to get the milk.

The story shows a young woman on her way (possibly her way up, definitely a child becoming an adult), a subject that in and of itself is as important in modern society as any other subject could be. It also crosses cultural boun- daries. The moment is the fusion of themes and the asso- ciations that are possible thanks to this fusion. The maid is lower class and the young lady is upper class. Nowadays it is not as easily possible from race or from clothing to deduce the social class or social origin of a person.

The girl is colored but her clothes are rather European, especially the down jacket. Her headdress interestingly could be just as well African as European from Vermeer’s own time or form today. The braids are typically African. This alludes to a question of class or social standing. The story leads us to the question about a social class, racial circumstances, colonialism, immigration, adaptation, feminism (milk, motherhood).

The smartphone is a device in the girl‘s hands that allows us to stay connected but that also means dependent. Two people on opposite ends of a wire, receiving orders, causing action. The word „wired“ comes to mind. It implies someo- ne who is a) connected and b) under some form of stress (note: only a tense wire will transmit the signal to the bell). „Wired“ is also the term for technological connectivity which is omnipresent in the 21st century and which has in some ways enslaved us socially but also in the work place. This is not unlike the fashion of writing letters in the 18th century that several Vermeer paintings refer to. Now we are writing WhatsApp and SMS messages or reading emails that gets us at any moment and interrupts what we are doing just like the girl on the picture interrupts her way back home to check a message.

The title came spontaneously and fortunately. “Besrat” – this is a real name of the girl from the portrait. The fact that Besrat means Good News. It couldn’t be a better coincidence. Not only for the SMS message she reads but also because “good news” has a relation to Christianity for “Evangelium” means good news. It is the good news of Christ. Meaning that young African women are actually good news. This is an economical reality in third world aid. They say that investing in the health and education of young African women in Africa is the investment with the highest return and the best long-term effect on the world possible. Exactly the same value, in the future will be the investing in the integration and education of immigrant youth here in Europe.

1974 Samara, Russian Federation

SHORT BIO   Early on Katerina Belkina (*1974) knew about her exceptional talent to see the world through different eyes. Born in Samara in the southeast of European Russia, she was brought up in an creative atmosphere by her mother, a visual artist. Her education at the Art Academy and the School for Photography of Michael Musorin in Samara gave her the tools to visualize her ideas. Exhibitions of her sublime, mystic self-portraits ensued in Moscow and Paris. Katerina Belkina was nominated for the prestigious Kandinsky Prize (comparable to the British Turner Prize) in Moscow in 2007. She won the International Lucas Cranach Award 2015 and the prestigious Hasselblad Masters Prize in 2016. Currently she lives and works in Werder (Havel).     ARTIST STATEMENT   It has always been fascinating for her to explore the psychology of people’s relationships with each other and with the outside world, to give shape to human emotions. To take joy, despondency, indifference, rapture and jealousy to pieces. Feelings are abstract, therefore it is so interesting to look for and find the form of their visualization.   Her face and body are the main instruments she uses to incarnate the images she wants. Standing in front of the camera as a model, she follows the age-old theatrical practice of playing roles. It gives impetus to the development of her own manner of narration. A part of her work, shooting is akin to a theatrical performance, where an urge to tell the viewer about emotions and feelings manifests itself through the characters in dialogues with the audience.   A passion for classical art and interest in everything new – technology, discoveries, experiments – led her to the type of mixed media, with which she works. From painting, she takes colors and create air as an element of space. Reality and character she takes from photography. Her style originates from a long artistic tradition – collage. That is how her characters and spaces come together. At the next stage, she chooses a brush of a graphics program. This is a subtle and accurate tool to create a light, weightless atmosphere similar to that of a dream. In her creative work, she is not searching for the subjects of thought. They spring from everyday life and observations of the people around. Choosing a motif for her exploration, she offers the audience a female view on things, which concern her. Undoubtedly, this view is based on feminist principles. Yet, the matter is not in confrontation, but in balance and harmony, where a woman is not an object, but foremost – energy.

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