E.V. Day's Kaleidoscopic Reinterpretation Of Monet's Flowers (PHOTOS)

PHOTOS: E.V. Day's Kaleidoscopic Reinterpretation Of Monet's Flowers

WHO: E.V. Day

WHAT: Seducers

WHEN: January 14 through March 5, 2011

WHERE: Carolina Nitsch Project Room
534 West 22 St.
New York, NY 10011
212.645.2030

WHY: What do you see? E.V. Day combines symmetry and nature in a way that leads to a very surprising visual element. Just like a kaleidoscope, these images transform themselves right before your eyes. One second you may see an insect, the next you might catch a glimpse of a mask. Whatever your perception, these photographs are bound to captivate you.

The Seducers series originates from E.V.'s three month exploration during the summer of 2010 as artist in residence at Claude Monet's estate in Giverny. There she would follow the gardeners on their daily pruning rounds, collecting blooms they'd clipped at the flowers' visual peak. The most arresting of these specimens were then pressed in a microwave, scanned digitally, and printed on photo paper at 18 times their original size. The electric, vibrant colors of the flowers in the images are accurate but each image is manipulated by taking exactly half the image, and mirroring it, thereby forcing a perfect symmetry upon the natural geometry of each flower.

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