Vohra’s Creepers
-
About the work
- Location
-
Country: UK
City: England
Place: Manchester, DCMS Hub
The term ‘Creepers’ used in the title of this painting is taken from Charlotte Perkins Gilman’s feminist 19th-century short story, The Yellow Wallpaper, which takes the form of a secret diary written by a young married woman who is suffering from postnatal depression. During strict bed rest and separated from her baby, the protagonist starts to notice unsettling things about her room, specifically the wallpaper in which she starts to see sinister patterns and trapped figures.
For Rosie Vohra this story felt particularly relevant as many of us have become intensely familiar with our domestic spaces during Covid-19. The two figures in this painting are drawn from an image of mime artists, Jean Soubeyran and Brigitte Soubeyran. Miming involves acting out a story with the body, without the use of speech, similar to the creeping women in The Yellow Wallpaper. The Creepers occupy an interior cave-like space made from stone and marble. As in The Yellow Wallpaper, they too are stuck in the material of their surroundings.
-
Explore
- Places
- Subjects
- Materials & Techniques
- acrylic (paint), canvas, ink, acrylic painting
-
Details
- Artist
-
Rosie Vohra (1992 - )
- Title
- Vohra’s Creepers
- Date
- 2022
- Medium
- acrylic and ink on canvas
- Dimensions
- height: 203.0 cm; width: 153.0 cm; depth: 5.0 cm
- Acquisition
- Purchased from the artist, March 2022
- Provenance
- The artist; from whom purchased by UK Government Art Collection, 28 March 2022
- GAC number
- 19055