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09 January 2025
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Chris Ofili
Harvest - Flower Eaters
, 2021
30.2 x 41.5 x 3.5 in. (76.7 x 105.4 x 8.9 cm.)
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Chris Ofili
British, born 1968
Harvest - Flower Eaters
,
2021
Chris Ofili
Harvest - Flower Eaters
, 2021
30.2 x 41.5 x 3.5 in. (76.7 x 105.4 x 8.9 cm.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
View to Scale
Zoom
Medium
Watercolour, charcoal and gold leaf on paper
Size
30.2 x 41.5 x 3.5 in. (76.7 x 105.4 x 8.9 cm.)
Price
Price on Request
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Victoria Miro Gallery
London / Venice
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About this Artwork
Provenance
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Exhibitions
Chris Ofili: Harvest, Victoria Miro, Venice, Italy 25 June - 10 September 2022
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Description
Harvest – Flower Eaters is a suite of new works by Chris Ofili completed over the past year in watercolour, charcoal and gold leaf on paper. These works comprise two rectangular forms that read as windows on to a nocturnal world. They contain, on the left-hand side, a female head, and on the right, a male head. Facing one another, bowed and with their eyes closed, each of these holds in their mouth the stem of a flower that bursts into kaleidoscopic colour, while showers of gold dots take on a constellatory appearance against the surrounding darkness.
Though they share a state of revery, they are quite separate from one another compositionally. Perhaps they refer to the lotus-eaters encountered by Odysseus in Greek mythology who, succumbing to the narcotic effect of the lotus fruit and flowers, entered a blissful, amnesic slumber, later recalled in Tennyson’s poem The Lotos-Eaters with its lines: ‘Music that gentlier on the spirit lies, Than tir’d eyelids upon tir’d eyes; Music that brings sweet sleep down from the blissful skies.’
While Ofili’s Flower Eaters do not represent a specific story, they are indicative of the artist’s continued interest in the kinds of narrative found in classical mythology, and in the other-worldly or super-human forces or energies that seem to prefigure moments of transformation. They tap into different levels of consciousness, the distinct emotional registers of night and day, and the mystery and folklore of Trinidad, where the artist has lived since 2005.
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