About The Work
“I’m figuring something out, by copying a work. You internalize it and get to know it so well. It’s more of a conversation or a way of having a dialogue. And, of course, I’m going to take things from everyone […] and use it. I need to respond to the art I look at. So, in a way my paintings are my reply. To go back to painting being a question, and art being a question, I want to talk back.” - Cecily Brown
Cecily Brown’s suite of 5 new etchings are in dialogue with The Five Senses, a collaborative series of allegorical paintings made in the early 1600s by Jan Brueghel the Elder and Peter Paul Rubens, and now held in the collection of the Prado Museum in Madrid. Throughout her career, Brown has used the work of old masters as a jumping off point to explore contemporary ideas of sexuality, desire, death and excess. These new etchings feature the figures of Venus and Cupid exploring sight through numerous Roman busts and paintings; hearing by playing the lyre; smell through the fragrance of lilies, roses, hollyhocks and tulips; and touch through physical contact. In the fifth etching, Venus and Cupid are replaced by a mortal seated before an abundance of food and being poured a large goblet of wine, alluding to human weakness in the face of gluttony.
Courtesy of Two Palms
About Cecily Brown
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: Magnus Resch picks the Artspace editions that would look great on any wall
- Interviews & Features: Dana Schutz launches new Phaidon & Artspace edition, Line Painter, 2023
- Interviews & Features: Artspace Editions are on show at Christie's this month
- Interviews & Features: Dana Schutz's Really Great Year
- Interviews & Features: Cecily Brown's Really Great Year
Etching
14.00 x 20.00 in
35.6 x 50.8 cm
This work is signed, dated, and numbered in graphite on recto.
About The Work
“I’m figuring something out, by copying a work. You internalize it and get to know it so well. It’s more of a conversation or a way of having a dialogue. And, of course, I’m going to take things from everyone […] and use it. I need to respond to the art I look at. So, in a way my paintings are my reply. To go back to painting being a question, and art being a question, I want to talk back.” - Cecily Brown
Cecily Brown’s suite of 5 new etchings are in dialogue with The Five Senses, a collaborative series of allegorical paintings made in the early 1600s by Jan Brueghel the Elder and Peter Paul Rubens, and now held in the collection of the Prado Museum in Madrid. Throughout her career, Brown has used the work of old masters as a jumping off point to explore contemporary ideas of sexuality, desire, death and excess. These new etchings feature the figures of Venus and Cupid exploring sight through numerous Roman busts and paintings; hearing by playing the lyre; smell through the fragrance of lilies, roses, hollyhocks and tulips; and touch through physical contact. In the fifth etching, Venus and Cupid are replaced by a mortal seated before an abundance of food and being poured a large goblet of wine, alluding to human weakness in the face of gluttony.
Courtesy of Two Palms
About Cecily Brown
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: Magnus Resch picks the Artspace editions that would look great on any wall
- Interviews & Features: Dana Schutz launches new Phaidon & Artspace edition, Line Painter, 2023
- Interviews & Features: Artspace Editions are on show at Christie's this month
- Interviews & Features: Dana Schutz's Really Great Year
- Interviews & Features: Cecily Brown's Really Great Year
Published by Two Palms, NY
- Ships in 2 to 12 business days from New York. Framed works ship in 6 to 16 business days from New York.
- This work is final sale and not eligible for return.
- Questions about this work?
- Interested in other works by this artist or other artists? We will source them for you.
- Want to pay in installments?
Contact an Artspace Advisor
advisor@artspace.com