FREEDOM TO FLY NO 2

FREEDOM TO FLY NO 2

$1,000.00

Verisart Certificate of Authenticity

About the product

First Edition of 20 Art Photos Printed on Hahnemühle Fine Art Paper Mount with White Inlet and Black Frame behind TruLife® Acrylic Glass Signed and Numbered Recto.
85 cm high x 65 cm wide
33 in high x 25 in wide
Series: Freedom To Fly
Black Framing
Provenance: Artist
Antonia Pia Gordon©

PRINT GEO 0001 

Details

Hahnemühle Digital Fine Art papers have been certified by independent institutes to be highly resistant to aging and are vegan, in order to meet the highest requirements of customers. TruLife® Acrylic Surface : 99% UV Protection, Abrasion Resistance, Anti-Reflective, Anti-static, Shatter Resistance & Safety

Artist statement

In Antonia Pia Gordon's Birds Freedom to Fly series, she captures a fleeting moment above the Ras Al Khaimah beach, offering a modern perspective on nature and technology. A natural progression from her Colorizons series, these artistic photographs blend bold, expressive colors with a profound exploration of the horizon. Gordon introduces a juxtaposition of nature and technology, reminiscent of her Past Present Future series, delving into the impact of technology on mankind and nature. This series surpasses her previous works, drawing inspiration from Percy Bysshe Shelley's Ode to a Skylark, epitomizing freedom and mankind's aspiration for effortless flight. Referencing Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost, the cormorant, a symbol of eternity, encourages us to savor the present and seek infinity—a recurring theme in Gordon's art. The juxtaposition of nature and technology, with black interacting with bold red, echoes her signature duality of theme.

The choice of cormorants, ancient birds with ancestors dating back to the dinosaur era, against the backdrop of Dubai, a modern metropolis with a 7000-year history, is intentional. Cormorants, featured in heraldry and known for their wing-drying pose resembling the Christian cross, are set in a city that bridges tradition and modernity. The series symbolically intertwines cultures and religions, posing universal questions. Gordon's quest to merge tradition with modernity is evident as the cormorants soar alongside airplanes and helicopters. The inclusion of the endangered Socotra cormorant, supported by Dubai's nature reserves, juxtaposes tradition with a dynamic, advancing metropolis. The series challenges the idea of limits, questioning whether the sky truly is the limit. In the 25 art photos comprising the Birds Freedom to Fly series, Gordon invites viewers to soar over the Strait of Hormuz, exploring the intersection of tradition and modernity. She prompts contemplation on the relationship between nature and mankind, questioning whether one follows the other, and underscores mankind's conquest of the sea and sky in a shared quest for abundance. continue reading …