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The Awakening - Left Panel by `kevissimo:iconkevissimo:


©2003-2009 `kevissimo
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Submitted: December 5, 2003
Image Size: 235 KB
Resolution: 673×288
Comments: 9
Favourites & Collections: 30 [who?]

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Artist's Comments

This is the left panel of the The Awakening mural. It runs from the Astrological Clock to the Cathedral.

Created for the exhibition " Until the Road Forgets" at the Pasadena Museum of California Art.

The center figure is Jan Hus, the 15th Century martyr who was burned at the stake in Constance, Germany in 1415. It is a 360 degree view of Old Town Prague comprised of 250+ photographic elements.

Oilgraph Triptych on masonite panels with bone and blood.
36"x240"
2003

There's additional information on its making here:
[link]
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Comments


WOW

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Keep killing - Bonsai 4ever :)
I know this has already been said, but wow....Just wow. This is just amazing work!
the light post looks spectacular, and so do the colors...

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Love the community. deviantART.
you are my freekin hero...I wish I could see the whole piece
such emotion in these pices...love the movment in the sky

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...you took the love from our lives to put the sex on the radio - Thursday
This one is so great, I like so many things about it I can't write them all down.
this whole mural is incredible... leaves me lost for words but i'll try: sinister, haunting, menacing, powerful... like the martyr's scream has infected the whole place & won't dissipate. fantastic work.
this is one of the most amazing and powerful works (meaning the entire triptych, as well as individual panels) i've come across on this site. the forms and explosions of colors are one of the closest things i've seen that can match the visual passion of a dream, memory or internal perspective. the panoramic images you've assembled here with the mixed media have pushed this beyond the awkward look of panoramic photography, and actually make me feel entrenched in this vision. i think it's also the spots you've chose to illuminate in each of these panels (even directed by the planted light posts and fired)-- it really directs the eye in a natural, reactive way.

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