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lantairvlea β€” Captivity and Freedom

Published: 2008-06-13 12:56:09 +0000 UTC; Views: 562; Favourites: 9; Downloads: 21
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Description Download to see the larger version. DA's been a stink and I haven't been able to upload anything. FINALLY it's letting me. One of the massive pieces I did this Spring.

There are various types of captivity and freedom. There is the physical captivity of the slave, forced to work for whatever master purchases him or her, thankfully this is mostly outdated and not widespread. The more pervasive type of captivity that abounds today comes from addiction and abuse. No less damaging to the human body and a thousand times more harmful to the human spirit. Our actions in life do one of two things, no matter how large or small; they bind us or they make us free. By making the correct choices we can continue to grow, progress, and live unhindered by cumbersome baggage. It doesn’t mean it will always be easy, but it will create a freer, more complete life. If we constantly chose things that drag us down, bind us, and brings us to the subjection of whim and passion, we find ourselves stumbling along in an ungainly, jarring fashion.

Like the horse who resists even the most gentle and soft hand, they move forward, but without grace or finesse and with more effort and trial than another who gives to the subtle pressure and gentle guidance of a knowing hand. While it might initially be viewed as a restriction, the guidance received allows the horse to move with more fluid grace and balance than initially thought possible. Not only does he become graceful, fluid, and balanced on the ground, but carrying the extra weight of a rider, the extra burden of another, he moves with apparently effortless grace.

Charcoa on three pieces of 22"X30" printmaking paper.
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Comments: 8

meganbednarz [2008-07-11 01:42:59 +0000 UTC]

Wow, I really like your story and thought behind this. Not to mention that the piece itself is pretty great. Great work!

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lantairvlea In reply to meganbednarz [2008-07-11 12:52:58 +0000 UTC]

Thank you very much! The assignment called for a "conversation" or "commentary" on opposites and this is how I chose to portray it.

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MERCIlish [2008-06-28 08:33:06 +0000 UTC]

wow. i love the shading, may i know how it took you to finish it?

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lantairvlea In reply to MERCIlish [2008-06-28 21:44:01 +0000 UTC]

Thankye! As far as time it took to finish it was at least thirty hours, possibly fifty, maybe more, but I'm not sure. I worked on it both in class and outside of it (in-class time probably being about 24 hours...) and it was completed over the course of a month or so, but I don't quite exactly recall how long.

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MERCIlish In reply to lantairvlea [2008-06-29 15:31:24 +0000 UTC]

wow! that's a lot of hard work! but it worth while

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lantairvlea In reply to MERCIlish [2008-06-30 17:36:59 +0000 UTC]

It definitely was worth it! Thanks!

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kaleadora [2008-06-19 13:28:47 +0000 UTC]

No comments?? Geez. This is really beautiful! The shading is amazing, the depth of it adds a lot to the mood of the piece. I like the background on the first panel, it's really dramatic and helps achieve your point; and the final panel is just gorgeous. Love the angle you chose. Great work!

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lantairvlea In reply to kaleadora [2008-06-20 20:52:58 +0000 UTC]

Thank you! This past semester I spent a lot of my time wrestling with the Charcoal medium and trying to get it to work for me. I'm glad the last panel works so well, I was hoping it would be a good place to "rest" as the viewer "reads" the drawing. I need to post some detail shots I think.

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