• Fernanda Naman, Sem título
  • Untitled (diptych)
  • Fernanda Naman, Sem título
  • Fernanda Naman, Sem título

Fernanda Naman

“Untitled (diptych)”

Untitled (diptych)

(SKU. 9623)

  • Date

    2020
  • Technique

    UV photographic printing, mounted in black acrylic box with gold leaf application
  • Dimensions

    (H x W) 40 x 30.5 cm (each)
  • Edition

    12 + 2PA

  • Comes with certificate of authenticity


Regular price R$ 9.000,00
Regular price Sale price R$ 9.000,00
Available for immediate shipping

Different textures are found in images that highlight the presence of matter; the value of gold in contrast with the wear and tear of burnt wood creates a positive tension between opposites. Although the materials share the same space, they do not touch each other; the image printed directly onto the acrylic allows the gold leaf to be seen through the gaps created by the cutouts in the trunk.

The set is completed with just these two elements enclosed in a black acrylic box that isolates them in themselves, in an environment where the relationship between different parts of nature is capable of creating an atmosphere of transformation and unity.

Biography

Fernanda Naman - Carbono Galeria

Fernanda Naman

b. 1973, São Paulo (SP), Brazil | Lives and works in São Paulo (SP), Brazil.

With a degree in architecture, Fernanda began her career in art independently and intuitively, seeking courses and experiences related to the area. She began her artistic practice in painting, but it was in photography that she found her main avenue of expression.

The view of landscape expands beyond its traditional meaning, the artist uses natural and artificial elements to create new meanings about the known, whether through cutouts of wide scenes or close-up photographs of certain objects.

Her work does not seek documentary records, but to document the anxieties, desires, doubts and emotions experienced by the artist, who explains: “life is more than the simple documentation of these passages, but rather the memory of this trajectory that can take each one to their own particular infinity.”