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What I particularly like about this painting is the modesty and humility; the simplicity
of the composition on the one hand, but on the other hand, the painting is so exquisite
and so exuberant in its attention to detail.
Zurbarán created this dialectical tension between the simplicity and this virtuous equality.
I like the way the spacing of Zurbarán's painting has been compressed by using the
very dark background and relatively narrow ledge for the foreground, bringing a very
particular tension. It's almost breathless and deadly, and yet there is something so
alive in the painting.
There is something about the mathematical arrangement of the elements trying to reach
perfect balance between those very few elements, and within this perfect balance, we reach
a distilled composition – this idea of equilibrium, which can be associated with death or the
end of things.
When I look at this painting, it seems the process is so introverted in his engagement
with the surfaces, with the subject, with the beautiful and delicate relationship of
the flower that is just hanging in balance and the proximity of the petals to the edges
of the cup, the way the lines dissolve into this void of the plate. Also, you look at
the circular shapes through the painting, and you see how many circles exist on the
plate and each of the petals. The handle of the cup, the top of the cup; it's a circle
within a circle and in the same token one can look at the triangular relationship that
exists between the three elements and how those geometries are holding the tension in
relation to each other.
For a work of art to come to life, it's about those relationships that exist in between
attraction and repulsion, and there is something about this painting that, on the one hand,
is so modest and pure, and on the other hand, you realise the energy, time and almost show-off
qualities that are coming to life in the reflections of the surfaces that are just so exquisite.
The abilities of the painter are way beyond any other still life painting throughout the
history of painting, and I can say this without exaggerating.
I think that there is something so beautiful just in engaging and looking and allowing
those elements that are present there on the surface. When I make work it is somehow in
conversation with the Old Masters, where the starting point is that those pieces will resonate
over a long period of time, and one day something will come together somehow in a way that I
cannot really pin down. I'm not sure in a hundred years or 200 years from now if any
of my work will survive and if somebody will encounter it, how they will interpret it then.
What I really would hope is that the experience will be a more formal one, and through looking.