Swept Away

Very occasionally I run into an image that, in the best analogy I can think of, burrows beneath my skin and won’t let go.

Last week, while researching something completely unrelated online, I somehow happened upon this amazing photograph and was absolutely swept away. I feel something indefinably visceral and ancient each time I look at it. But beyond that, most simply put, it brings me joy.

Eyes as Big as Plates # Agnes II (Norway 2011) © Caroline Hjorth & Riitta Ikonen

Eyes as Big as Plates # Agnes II (Norway 2011) © Karoline Hjorth & Riitta Ikonen

This is just one piece within an expansive collaboration named “Eyes as Big as Plates” between Karoline Hjorth (NO) and Riitta Ikonen (FI). Considering my own current portrait project, the age of the subjects was no doubt the initial attraction. But the more I study the images, each subject’s integration within elements of nature somehow feels like a true and long-held secret finally revealed.

I’ve lifted an excerpt from Hjorth’s statement directly from her website, hoping that it will inspire you to visit one of the above links to see more of these amazing photographs.

“We need to learn to see not just with Western eyes but with Islamic eyes and Inuit eyes, not just with human eyes but with golden-cheeked warbler eyes, coho salmon eyes, and polar bear eyes, and not even just with eyes at all but with the wild, barely articulate being of clouds and seas and rocks and trees and stars.”  ROY SCRANTON

Eyes as Big as Plates is the ongoing collaborative project between Karoline Hjorth (NO) and Riitta Ikonen (FI). Starting out as a play on characters from Nordic folklore, Eyes as Big as Plates has evolved into a continual search for modern human’s belonging to nature. The series is produced in collaboration with retired farmers, fishermen, zoologists, plumbers, opera singers, housewives, artists, academics and ninety year old parachutists. Since 2011 the artist duo has portrayed seniors in Norway, Finland, France, US, UK, Iceland, the Faroe Islands, Sweden, Japan, Greenland, Czech Republic and South Korea. Each image in the series presents a solitary figure in a landscape, dressed in elements from surroundings that indicate neither time nor place. Here nature acts as both content and context: characters literally inhabit the landscape wearing sculptures they create in collaboration with the artists.

Meanwhile, I finally feel comfortable enough to leave my sketchbook and have moved into the next phase of my elder women portraits. I have still have a way to go with the stitching portion, but here’s where I am to date.

WIP: House on Fire

WIP: House on Fire ©2022 Elizabeth Fram, Watercolor and stitch on paper, 8-7/8 x 11 inches

8 thoughts on “Swept Away

  1. Dian

    So glad you’re stitching on your portraits! Wonderful.
    Do you have to move to heavier paper?
    The woman haloed in sticks is priceless.

    1. ehwfram Post author

      The paper I used here is fine, but I’d like to experiment with a couple of other types to see if one rises to the top with both paint and stitch in mind. Trying to find a balance of being heavy enough to support the stitches while not being too thick to needle through. This paper is 180lb (270 gsm)

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