
IT’S a weird feeling, when your brain knows something to be true, but you can’t bring yourself to fully believe it (see also: the Abbatars at ABBA Voyage). This is what’s happening when I look at today’s cover of the Standard. It looks like a meticulous illustration or digital invention; I know perfectly well that it’s a near-microscopic, photographic image of a splodge of actual paint. I just… can’t quite get my head around it.
“In real life it’s probably two centimetres square, something like that,” says Rob Carter, one half of the artist duo Rob & Nick Carter with his wife, known otherwise as Nicky. “But with the advent of super high-powered digital cameras — this is a 150 megapixel camera — we can capture all that detail from a tiny little paint blob and blow it up to a massive scale.”
The image, part of a new series of works by the pair that continue their longstanding experiments combining painting and photography, is being made available as a limited edition print (just 95 will be made) exclusively to Standard readers, for one week only, for the extremely discounted price of £350. It’s a far cry from their usual prices.
“Some of our work is quite prohibitive, cost-wise, because it is so labour intensive to make,” says Rob. “Some of our transforming films have taken 5,000 man-hours of digital animation, so that takes them beyond a certain price point.” Their Transforming Still Life Painting, a lavishly framed threehour looped digital rendering of Ambrosius Bosschaert the Elder’s Vase with Flowers in a Window (1618) in which night gradually replaces day, and a caterpillar and a butterfly visit the scene, sold at auction in 2023 for just under £53,000.
“When people say, we can’t afford your work, we say don’t worry, we can’t afford it either,” laughs Nicky.
Esta historia es de la edición September 03, 2024 de Evening Standard.
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Esta historia es de la edición September 03, 2024 de Evening Standard.
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