View the Prospectus for this Art ShowView information about the Juror and the Juror's Statement for this juried art showView the entries for this art show

  Beatles: Ripples into the 21st Century  
Show Opened:  10/1/2001Online Art Show:  Beatles: Ripples into the 21st Century
Entry deadline has passed.
 

<< First Page     < Prior Page     Page 1 of 2     Next Page >     Last Page >>
Thumbnail View                  < Prior Item                  Item 2 of 9                  Next Item >                  Thumbnail View
Art: Nothing's Gonna Change My World by Artist Trevor Clark
"Nothing's Gonna Change My World"
Trevor Clark
Juror's
Choice


Art: Happiness is a Warm Gun by Artist April
"Happiness is a Warm Gun"
April
Member's
Choice


Art: Beatles Juiced by Artist Trevor Clark
"Beatles Juiced"
Trevor Clark

Art: Blackbird in Mystery Garden by Artist Laura Nugent
"Blackbird in Mystery Garden"
Laura Nugent

Art: Tribute to a Beatles Fan by Artist Colleen Haddock-McElroy
"Tribute to a Beatles Fan"
Colleen Haddock-McElroy

"Happiness is a Warm Gun"

Art: Happiness is a Warm Gun by Artist April
 Add To Your Favorite ArtCreate and Send an ECard from this Art 
 
Media:  acrylic on stretched canvas
Dimensions:  22" x 28"

Winner
Member's Choice

In this painting I tried to wrestle with conflicting issues and messages around guns. At the time it was painted, I was concerned about a report of increased gun sales since the attack on America 9-11-01. Despite my fairly liberal background which for most includes gun control, I found myself compelled by the notion that perhaps owning a gun might offer me some sense of security and safety in a time when I, perhaps like many of the gun buyers, was feeling very anxious and fearful. Focusing my thoughts particularly on women and other mothers, I began thinking of ways that a gun might fit into the life and world of an ordinary woman or mother who had previously been concerned primarily with issues mostly associated with women...femininity, beauty, home, fashion, etc. I began thinking of "Happiness is a Warm Gun" and wondered how one could take a weapon made of steel and make it warm in this way vs. how the lyrics were actually meant. It was for this reason I used "feminine colors" ...colors actually pulled from some of my past paintings portraying domestic objects. In this way, I attempted to blur the boundaries between this object (the gun) and symbols one might associate with femininity, beauty, comfort and home. Similarly, the gasmasks in the background serve as mere decorative objects, such as a hat or home accessory might be, painted in similar colors.

Artist:
April  
New England
EBSQ Plus Juried ArtistShow Awards Winner - see the art
View this Artist's profile, here, at EBSQ! Email This Artist 
Add To Your Favorite Artists


<< First Page     < Prior Page     Page 1 of 2     Next Page >     Last Page >>
Thumbnail View                  < Prior Item                  Item 2 of 9                  Next Item >                  Thumbnail View