Base de données du CACC sur l'art canadien

Tarp

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

Work ID: 71250

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : 35.56 x 35.56 cm

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Oeuvre d'art par Elizabeth Siegfried

Sink: Drained

Sink: Drained

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71220

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1984

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Fist

Fist

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2152

Description:

Des mesures : 12.7 x 17.78 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1988

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A Sense of Place #21: West Wind

A Sense of Place #21: West Wind

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2139

Description:

Des mesures : 40.64 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1991

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A Sense of Place #6: The Point

A Sense of Place #6: The Point

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2129

Description:

Des mesures : 40.64 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1991

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A Sense of Place #2: Basswood Light

A Sense of Place #2: Basswood Light

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2125

Description:

Des mesures : 40.64 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1991

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Double Exposure

Double Exposure

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2143

Description:

Des mesures : 10.16 x 12.7 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1992

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A Sense of Place #5: The Waldheim

A Sense of Place #5: The Waldheim

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2128

Description:

Des mesures : 40.64 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1992

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A Sense of Place #4: Untitled

A Sense of Place #4: Untitled

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2127

Description:

Des mesures : 40.64 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1992

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A Sense of Place #13: In Mama’s Mosquito Net Veil #2

A Sense of Place #13: In Mama’s Mosquito Net Veil #2

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2134

Description:

Des mesures : 40.64 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1992

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A Sense of Place #19: Mama’s Couch

A Sense of Place #19: Mama’s Couch

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2138

Description:

Des mesures : 40.64 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1992

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Hands

Hands

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2148

Description:

Des mesures : 12.7 x 15.24 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1992

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A Sense of Place #17: the Big House Porch

A Sense of Place #17: the Big House Porch

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2136

Description:

Des mesures : 40.64 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1992

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A Sense of Place #18: With Mama’s Partridge Tray

A Sense of Place #18: With Mama’s Partridge Tray

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2137

Description:

Des mesures : 40.64 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1992

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A Sense of Place #10: Another Path

A Sense of Place #10: Another Path

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2132

Description:

Des mesures : 40.64 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1992

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A Sense of Place #12: In Mama’s Mosquito Net Veil #1

A Sense of Place #12: In Mama’s Mosquito Net Veil #1

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2133

Description:

Des mesures : 40.64 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1992

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A Sense of Place #7: The Boathouse

A Sense of Place #7: The Boathouse

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2130

Description:

Des mesures : 40.64 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1992

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Telltale Stone

Telltale Stone

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2145

Description:

Des mesures : 20.32 x 25.4 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1992

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Weathered Coast

Weathered Coast

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2140

Description:

Des mesures : 20.32 x 25.4 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1992

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A Sense of Place #8: Integration

A Sense of Place #8: Integration

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2131

Description:

Des mesures : 40.64 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1992

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A Sense of Place #15: Untitled

A Sense of Place #15: Untitled

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2135

Description:

Des mesures : 40.64 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1992

Matériaux :

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A Sense of Place #3: In Mama’s Hat

A Sense of Place #3: In Mama’s Hat

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2126

Description:

Des mesures : 40.64 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1992

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Same Lady at the Door

Same Lady at the Door

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2147

Description:

Des mesures :

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1994

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Lady at the Door

Lady at the Door

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2144

Description:

Des mesures :

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1994

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Akrotiri

Akrotiri

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2155

Description:

Des mesures : 27.94 x 27.94 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1994

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Sumner Garden

Sumner Garden

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2146

Description:

Des mesures :

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1994

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Anet

Anet

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2141

Description:

Des mesures : 27.94 x 27.94 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1995

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Monet’s Winter Garden

Monet’s Winter Garden

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2154

Description:

Des mesures :

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1995

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Talloires Roses

Talloires Roses

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2150

Description:

Des mesures :

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1995

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South End

South End

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2151

Description:

Des mesures :

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1996

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Algonquin Forest

Algonquin Forest

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2153

Description:

Des mesures : 27.94 x 27.94 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1996

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The Opera Singer

The Opera Singer

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 2149

Description:

Des mesures :

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1996

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Webs

Webs

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14301

Description:

Des mesures : 20.955 x 30.48 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1997

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Backdoor

Backdoor

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14302

Description:

Des mesures : 20.955 x 30.48 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1997

Matériaux :

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Cradle

Cradle

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14315

Description:

Des mesures : 25.4 x 25.4 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1997

Matériaux :

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White

White

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14299

Description:

Des mesures : 25.4 x 25.4 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1997

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The Fall

The Fall

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14312

Description:

Des mesures : 24.13 x 24.13 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1997

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Lawn

Lawn

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14311

Description:

Des mesures : 25.4 x 25.4 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1997

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Collection virtuelle :

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Senescence

Senescence

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14310

Description:

Des mesures : 21.59 x 30.48 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1997

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Evanescence

Evanescence

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14300

Description:

Des mesures : 20.955 x 30.48 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1997

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Amanita

Amanita

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14308

Description:

Des mesures : 20.955 x 30.48 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1998

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Jaw Bone

Jaw Bone

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14314

Description:

Des mesures : 24.765 x 25.4 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1998

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Grasp

Grasp

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14307

Description:

Des mesures : 20.955 x 30.48 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1998

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Collection virtuelle :

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Mother’s Hands

Mother’s Hands

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14318

Description:

Des mesures : 20.955 x 29.21 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1998

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Sternum

Sternum

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14305

Description:

Des mesures : 25.4 x 25.4 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1998

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Collection virtuelle :

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Verge

Verge

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14309

Description:

Des mesures : 25.4 x 25.4 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1998

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Time

Time

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14304

Description:

Des mesures : 20.32 x 25.4 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1998

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Koi

Koi

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14313

Description:

Des mesures : 20.32 x 29.845 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1998

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Radiant

Radiant

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14316

Description:

Des mesures : 25.4 x 25.4 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1998

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Vortex

Vortex

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14324

Description: Photograph taken in 1997; printed in 1999.

Des mesures : platinum print

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1999

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Pane

Pane

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14323

Description: Photograph taken in 1997; printed in 1999.

Des mesures : platinum print

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1999

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Presence

Presence

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14322

Description: Photograph taken in 1985; printed in 1999.

Des mesures : platinum print

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1999

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Off Season

Off Season

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71241

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : two sizes: 35.56 x 55.88 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1999

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Collection virtuelle :

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Jarred

Jarred

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14321

Description: Photograph taken in 1988; printed in 1999.

Des mesures : platinum print

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1999

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Wary

Wary

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14325

Description:

Des mesures : 22.86 x 29.21 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1999

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Fractured

Fractured

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 14320

Description: Photograph taken in 1988; printed in 1999.

Des mesures : platinum print

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 1999

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Clipped: Vision

Clipped: Vision

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71217

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 71.12 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2000

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Clipped: Flight

Clipped: Flight

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71219

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 71.12 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2000

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Clipped: Grounded

Clipped: Grounded

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71216

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 71.12 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2000

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Vigil: Frenzy

Vigil: Frenzy

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71210

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 71.12 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2000

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Clipped: Wound

Clipped: Wound

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71218

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 71.12 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2000

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Clipped: An Offering

Clipped: An Offering

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71215

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 71.12 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2000

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Vigil: Abandoned

Vigil: Abandoned

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71209

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 71.12 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2000

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Sink: Insulated

Sink: Insulated

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71221

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2001

Matériaux :

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Vigil: Frenzy 2

Vigil: Frenzy 2

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71213

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 71.12 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2001

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Vigil: Prone

Vigil: Prone

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71211

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 71.12 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2001

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Vigil: Claws

Vigil: Claws

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71212

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 71.12 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2001

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Vigil: Clutch

Vigil: Clutch

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71214

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 71.12 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2001

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Sink: Wrists

Sink: Wrists

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71222

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2001

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By the Sea

By the Sea

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71244

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : two sizes: 35.56 x 55.88 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

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Date de réalisation : 2002

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The Dam

The Dam

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71267

Description:

Des mesures : 35.56 x 35.56 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2002

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Broken Circle

Broken Circle

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71259

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : two sizes: 35.56 x 35.56 cm and 50.8 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2002

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Copland Steps

Copland Steps

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71245

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : 35.56 x 35.56 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2002

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Floating

Floating

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71231

Description: From the series: Extinct.

The models in Extinct are animal rights activists. In the Summer of 2003 I photographed these dedicated people in the nude and in the environment. The purpose of the project was to cultivate a visceral connection between our species and the animals that inhabit the planet. Towards that end the final images explored human beings as animals; that we share this planet with other animals and that we too are ultimately vulnerable to our own destructive behavior, both physical and psychological.

To prepare for the photo shoots, and because I would not meet the models until the day of shooting, I asked the participants to fill out a questionnaire that would help me get a better sense of who they were. What is your favorite element and/or type of landscape? What is your favorite animal(s)/totem animals and reason, what is your favorite place on earth; what is most important to you about working in the animal protection movement? The replies were varied, enthusiastic and insightful. I made notes and sketches about each activist and with his or her response in mind, chose an appropriate environment that held some spiritual connection. How I planned to place them in that environment was also strongly influenced by their answers to the questions.

Much of the shooting was done on an extensive and diversified piece of property, home to a donkey sanctuary, in rural Ontario. In some cases I traveled to the activists' special spots where they felt particularly connected, and in many cases they came to my property in northern Ontario.

Extinct uses evolution as allegory. Beginning with immersion in water and progressing through emergence onto land, humankind is seen first basking in, and ultimately hiding from the elements. Extinct portrays humanity in a non-elevated state, stripped of protection, without power, all vulnerable. As both the hunter and the hunted, Man has brought itself and its habitat to the brink of annihilation.

Extinct invites the viewer to reflect on Earth's endangered system and whether it has been irrevocably damaged by our negligence, greed and complacency. Have we become the designers of Earth's ¿ and our own ¿ extinction?


Des mesures : two sizes: approx. 40.64 x 60.96 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Origin

Origin

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71235

Description: From the series: Extinct.

The models in Extinct are animal rights activists. In the Summer of 2003 I photographed these dedicated people in the nude and in the environment. The purpose of the project was to cultivate a visceral connection between our species and the animals that inhabit the planet. Towards that end the final images explored human beings as animals; that we share this planet with other animals and that we too are ultimately vulnerable to our own destructive behavior, both physical and psychological.

To prepare for the photo shoots, and because I would not meet the models until the day of shooting, I asked the participants to fill out a questionnaire that would help me get a better sense of who they were. What is your favorite element and/or type of landscape? What is your favorite animal(s)/totem animals and reason, what is your favorite place on earth; what is most important to you about working in the animal protection movement? The replies were varied, enthusiastic and insightful. I made notes and sketches about each activist and with his or her response in mind, chose an appropriate environment that held some spiritual connection. How I planned to place them in that environment was also strongly influenced by their answers to the questions.

Much of the shooting was done on an extensive and diversified piece of property, home to a donkey sanctuary, in rural Ontario. In some cases I traveled to the activists' special spots where they felt particularly connected, and in many cases they came to my property in northern Ontario.

Extinct uses evolution as allegory. Beginning with immersion in water and progressing through emergence onto land, humankind is seen first basking in, and ultimately hiding from the elements. Extinct portrays humanity in a non-elevated state, stripped of protection, without power, all vulnerable. As both the hunter and the hunted, Man has brought itself and its habitat to the brink of annihilation.

Extinct invites the viewer to reflect on Earth's endangered system and whether it has been irrevocably damaged by our negligence, greed and complacency. Have we become the designers of Earth's ¿ and our own ¿ extinction?


Des mesures : two sizes: approx. 40.64 x 60.96 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Motel Pool

Motel Pool

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71247

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : 35.56 x 55.88 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Fragment

Fragment

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71233

Description: From the series: Extinct.

The models in Extinct are animal rights activists. In the Summer of 2003 I photographed these dedicated people in the nude and in the environment. The purpose of the project was to cultivate a visceral connection between our species and the animals that inhabit the planet. Towards that end the final images explored human beings as animals; that we share this planet with other animals and that we too are ultimately vulnerable to our own destructive behavior, both physical and psychological.

To prepare for the photo shoots, and because I would not meet the models until the day of shooting, I asked the participants to fill out a questionnaire that would help me get a better sense of who they were. What is your favorite element and/or type of landscape? What is your favorite animal(s)/totem animals and reason, what is your favorite place on earth; what is most important to you about working in the animal protection movement? The replies were varied, enthusiastic and insightful. I made notes and sketches about each activist and with his or her response in mind, chose an appropriate environment that held some spiritual connection. How I planned to place them in that environment was also strongly influenced by their answers to the questions.

Much of the shooting was done on an extensive and diversified piece of property, home to a donkey sanctuary, in rural Ontario. In some cases I traveled to the activists' special spots where they felt particularly connected, and in many cases they came to my property in northern Ontario.

Extinct uses evolution as allegory. Beginning with immersion in water and progressing through emergence onto land, humankind is seen first basking in, and ultimately hiding from the elements. Extinct portrays humanity in a non-elevated state, stripped of protection, without power, all vulnerable. As both the hunter and the hunted, Man has brought itself and its habitat to the brink of annihilation.

Extinct invites the viewer to reflect on Earth's endangered system and whether it has been irrevocably damaged by our negligence, greed and complacency. Have we become the designers of Earth's ¿ and our own ¿ extinction?


Des mesures : two sizes: approx. 40.64 x 60.96 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Aleah

Aleah

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71227

Description: From the series: Extinct.

The models in Extinct are animal rights activists. In the Summer of 2003 I photographed these dedicated people in the nude and in the environment. The purpose of the project was to cultivate a visceral connection between our species and the animals that inhabit the planet. Towards that end the final images explored human beings as animals; that we share this planet with other animals and that we too are ultimately vulnerable to our own destructive behavior, both physical and psychological.

To prepare for the photo shoots, and because I would not meet the models until the day of shooting, I asked the participants to fill out a questionnaire that would help me get a better sense of who they were. What is your favorite element and/or type of landscape? What is your favorite animal(s)/totem animals and reason, what is your favorite place on earth; what is most important to you about working in the animal protection movement? The replies were varied, enthusiastic and insightful. I made notes and sketches about each activist and with his or her response in mind, chose an appropriate environment that held some spiritual connection. How I planned to place them in that environment was also strongly influenced by their answers to the questions.

Much of the shooting was done on an extensive and diversified piece of property, home to a donkey sanctuary, in rural Ontario. In some cases I traveled to the activists' special spots where they felt particularly connected, and in many cases they came to my property in northern Ontario.

Extinct uses evolution as allegory. Beginning with immersion in water and progressing through emergence onto land, humankind is seen first basking in, and ultimately hiding from the elements. Extinct portrays humanity in a non-elevated state, stripped of protection, without power, all vulnerable. As both the hunter and the hunted, Man has brought itself and its habitat to the brink of annihilation.

Extinct invites the viewer to reflect on Earth's endangered system and whether it has been irrevocably damaged by our negligence, greed and complacency. Have we become the designers of Earth's ¿ and our own ¿ extinction?


Des mesures : two sizes: approx. 40.64 x 60.96 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

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Forest Dancers

Forest Dancers

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71232

Description: From the series: Extinct.

The models in Extinct are animal rights activists. In the Summer of 2003 I photographed these dedicated people in the nude and in the environment. The purpose of the project was to cultivate a visceral connection between our species and the animals that inhabit the planet. Towards that end the final images explored human beings as animals; that we share this planet with other animals and that we too are ultimately vulnerable to our own destructive behavior, both physical and psychological.

To prepare for the photo shoots, and because I would not meet the models until the day of shooting, I asked the participants to fill out a questionnaire that would help me get a better sense of who they were. What is your favorite element and/or type of landscape? What is your favorite animal(s)/totem animals and reason, what is your favorite place on earth; what is most important to you about working in the animal protection movement? The replies were varied, enthusiastic and insightful. I made notes and sketches about each activist and with his or her response in mind, chose an appropriate environment that held some spiritual connection. How I planned to place them in that environment was also strongly influenced by their answers to the questions.

Much of the shooting was done on an extensive and diversified piece of property, home to a donkey sanctuary, in rural Ontario. In some cases I traveled to the activists' special spots where they felt particularly connected, and in many cases they came to my property in northern Ontario.

Extinct uses evolution as allegory. Beginning with immersion in water and progressing through emergence onto land, humankind is seen first basking in, and ultimately hiding from the elements. Extinct portrays humanity in a non-elevated state, stripped of protection, without power, all vulnerable. As both the hunter and the hunted, Man has brought itself and its habitat to the brink of annihilation.

Extinct invites the viewer to reflect on Earth's endangered system and whether it has been irrevocably damaged by our negligence, greed and complacency. Have we become the designers of Earth's ¿ and our own ¿ extinction?


Des mesures : two sizes: approx. 40.64 x 60.96 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Scent

Scent

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71237

Description: From the series: Extinct.

The models in Extinct are animal rights activists. In the Summer of 2003 I photographed these dedicated people in the nude and in the environment. The purpose of the project was to cultivate a visceral connection between our species and the animals that inhabit the planet. Towards that end the final images explored human beings as animals; that we share this planet with other animals and that we too are ultimately vulnerable to our own destructive behavior, both physical and psychological.

To prepare for the photo shoots, and because I would not meet the models until the day of shooting, I asked the participants to fill out a questionnaire that would help me get a better sense of who they were. What is your favorite element and/or type of landscape? What is your favorite animal(s)/totem animals and reason, what is your favorite place on earth; what is most important to you about working in the animal protection movement? The replies were varied, enthusiastic and insightful. I made notes and sketches about each activist and with his or her response in mind, chose an appropriate environment that held some spiritual connection. How I planned to place them in that environment was also strongly influenced by their answers to the questions.

Much of the shooting was done on an extensive and diversified piece of property, home to a donkey sanctuary, in rural Ontario. In some cases I traveled to the activists' special spots where they felt particularly connected, and in many cases they came to my property in northern Ontario.

Extinct uses evolution as allegory. Beginning with immersion in water and progressing through emergence onto land, humankind is seen first basking in, and ultimately hiding from the elements. Extinct portrays humanity in a non-elevated state, stripped of protection, without power, all vulnerable. As both the hunter and the hunted, Man has brought itself and its habitat to the brink of annihilation.

Extinct invites the viewer to reflect on Earth's endangered system and whether it has been irrevocably damaged by our negligence, greed and complacency. Have we become the designers of Earth's ¿ and our own ¿ extinction?


Des mesures : two sizes: approx. 40.64 x 60.96 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

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Droplet

Droplet

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71229

Description: From the series: Extinct.

The models in Extinct are animal rights activists. In the Summer of 2003 I photographed these dedicated people in the nude and in the environment. The purpose of the project was to cultivate a visceral connection between our species and the animals that inhabit the planet. Towards that end the final images explored human beings as animals; that we share this planet with other animals and that we too are ultimately vulnerable to our own destructive behavior, both physical and psychological.

To prepare for the photo shoots, and because I would not meet the models until the day of shooting, I asked the participants to fill out a questionnaire that would help me get a better sense of who they were. What is your favorite element and/or type of landscape? What is your favorite animal(s)/totem animals and reason, what is your favorite place on earth; what is most important to you about working in the animal protection movement? The replies were varied, enthusiastic and insightful. I made notes and sketches about each activist and with his or her response in mind, chose an appropriate environment that held some spiritual connection. How I planned to place them in that environment was also strongly influenced by their answers to the questions.

Much of the shooting was done on an extensive and diversified piece of property, home to a donkey sanctuary, in rural Ontario. In some cases I traveled to the activists' special spots where they felt particularly connected, and in many cases they came to my property in northern Ontario.

Extinct uses evolution as allegory. Beginning with immersion in water and progressing through emergence onto land, humankind is seen first basking in, and ultimately hiding from the elements. Extinct portrays humanity in a non-elevated state, stripped of protection, without power, all vulnerable. As both the hunter and the hunted, Man has brought itself and its habitat to the brink of annihilation.

Extinct invites the viewer to reflect on Earth's endangered system and whether it has been irrevocably damaged by our negligence, greed and complacency. Have we become the designers of Earth's ¿ and our own ¿ extinction?


Des mesures : two sizes: approx. 40.64 x 60.96 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Void

Void

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71240

Description: From the series: Extinct.

The models in Extinct are animal rights activists. In the Summer of 2003 I photographed these dedicated people in the nude and in the environment. The purpose of the project was to cultivate a visceral connection between our species and the animals that inhabit the planet. Towards that end the final images explored human beings as animals; that we share this planet with other animals and that we too are ultimately vulnerable to our own destructive behavior, both physical and psychological.

To prepare for the photo shoots, and because I would not meet the models until the day of shooting, I asked the participants to fill out a questionnaire that would help me get a better sense of who they were. What is your favorite element and/or type of landscape? What is your favorite animal(s)/totem animals and reason, what is your favorite place on earth; what is most important to you about working in the animal protection movement? The replies were varied, enthusiastic and insightful. I made notes and sketches about each activist and with his or her response in mind, chose an appropriate environment that held some spiritual connection. How I planned to place them in that environment was also strongly influenced by their answers to the questions.

Much of the shooting was done on an extensive and diversified piece of property, home to a donkey sanctuary, in rural Ontario. In some cases I traveled to the activists' special spots where they felt particularly connected, and in many cases they came to my property in northern Ontario.

Extinct uses evolution as allegory. Beginning with immersion in water and progressing through emergence onto land, humankind is seen first basking in, and ultimately hiding from the elements. Extinct portrays humanity in a non-elevated state, stripped of protection, without power, all vulnerable. As both the hunter and the hunted, Man has brought itself and its habitat to the brink of annihilation.

Extinct invites the viewer to reflect on Earth's endangered system and whether it has been irrevocably damaged by our negligence, greed and complacency. Have we become the designers of Earth's ¿ and our own ¿ extinction?


Des mesures : two sizes: approx. 40.64 x 60.96 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Sink: Fatigue

Sink: Fatigue

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71223

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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On Shore

On Shore

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71258

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : two sizes: 35.56 x 55.88 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Survival

Survival

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71239

Description: From the series: Extinct.

The models in Extinct are animal rights activists. In the Summer of 2003 I photographed these dedicated people in the nude and in the environment. The purpose of the project was to cultivate a visceral connection between our species and the animals that inhabit the planet. Towards that end the final images explored human beings as animals; that we share this planet with other animals and that we too are ultimately vulnerable to our own destructive behavior, both physical and psychological.

To prepare for the photo shoots, and because I would not meet the models until the day of shooting, I asked the participants to fill out a questionnaire that would help me get a better sense of who they were. What is your favorite element and/or type of landscape? What is your favorite animal(s)/totem animals and reason, what is your favorite place on earth; what is most important to you about working in the animal protection movement? The replies were varied, enthusiastic and insightful. I made notes and sketches about each activist and with his or her response in mind, chose an appropriate environment that held some spiritual connection. How I planned to place them in that environment was also strongly influenced by their answers to the questions.

Much of the shooting was done on an extensive and diversified piece of property, home to a donkey sanctuary, in rural Ontario. In some cases I traveled to the activists' special spots where they felt particularly connected, and in many cases they came to my property in northern Ontario.

Extinct uses evolution as allegory. Beginning with immersion in water and progressing through emergence onto land, humankind is seen first basking in, and ultimately hiding from the elements. Extinct portrays humanity in a non-elevated state, stripped of protection, without power, all vulnerable. As both the hunter and the hunted, Man has brought itself and its habitat to the brink of annihilation.

Extinct invites the viewer to reflect on Earth's endangered system and whether it has been irrevocably damaged by our negligence, greed and complacency. Have we become the designers of Earth's ¿ and our own ¿ extinction?


Des mesures : two sizes: approx. 40.64 x 60.96 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Caged

Caged

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71228

Description: From the series: Extinct.

The models in Extinct are animal rights activists. In the Summer of 2003 I photographed these dedicated people in the nude and in the environment. The purpose of the project was to cultivate a visceral connection between our species and the animals that inhabit the planet. Towards that end the final images explored human beings as animals; that we share this planet with other animals and that we too are ultimately vulnerable to our own destructive behavior, both physical and psychological.

To prepare for the photo shoots, and because I would not meet the models until the day of shooting, I asked the participants to fill out a questionnaire that would help me get a better sense of who they were. What is your favorite element and/or type of landscape? What is your favorite animal(s)/totem animals and reason, what is your favorite place on earth; what is most important to you about working in the animal protection movement? The replies were varied, enthusiastic and insightful. I made notes and sketches about each activist and with his or her response in mind, chose an appropriate environment that held some spiritual connection. How I planned to place them in that environment was also strongly influenced by their answers to the questions.

Much of the shooting was done on an extensive and diversified piece of property, home to a donkey sanctuary, in rural Ontario. In some cases I traveled to the activists' special spots where they felt particularly connected, and in many cases they came to my property in northern Ontario.

Extinct uses evolution as allegory. Beginning with immersion in water and progressing through emergence onto land, humankind is seen first basking in, and ultimately hiding from the elements. Extinct portrays humanity in a non-elevated state, stripped of protection, without power, all vulnerable. As both the hunter and the hunted, Man has brought itself and its habitat to the brink of annihilation.

Extinct invites the viewer to reflect on Earth's endangered system and whether it has been irrevocably damaged by our negligence, greed and complacency. Have we become the designers of Earth's ¿ and our own ¿ extinction?


Des mesures : two sizes: approx. 40.64 x 60.96 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

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Murmur

Murmur

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71234

Description: From the series: Extinct.

The models in Extinct are animal rights activists. In the Summer of 2003 I photographed these dedicated people in the nude and in the environment. The purpose of the project was to cultivate a visceral connection between our species and the animals that inhabit the planet. Towards that end the final images explored human beings as animals; that we share this planet with other animals and that we too are ultimately vulnerable to our own destructive behavior, both physical and psychological.

To prepare for the photo shoots, and because I would not meet the models until the day of shooting, I asked the participants to fill out a questionnaire that would help me get a better sense of who they were. What is your favorite element and/or type of landscape? What is your favorite animal(s)/totem animals and reason, what is your favorite place on earth; what is most important to you about working in the animal protection movement? The replies were varied, enthusiastic and insightful. I made notes and sketches about each activist and with his or her response in mind, chose an appropriate environment that held some spiritual connection. How I planned to place them in that environment was also strongly influenced by their answers to the questions.

Much of the shooting was done on an extensive and diversified piece of property, home to a donkey sanctuary, in rural Ontario. In some cases I traveled to the activists' special spots where they felt particularly connected, and in many cases they came to my property in northern Ontario.

Extinct uses evolution as allegory. Beginning with immersion in water and progressing through emergence onto land, humankind is seen first basking in, and ultimately hiding from the elements. Extinct portrays humanity in a non-elevated state, stripped of protection, without power, all vulnerable. As both the hunter and the hunted, Man has brought itself and its habitat to the brink of annihilation.

Extinct invites the viewer to reflect on Earth's endangered system and whether it has been irrevocably damaged by our negligence, greed and complacency. Have we become the designers of Earth's ¿ and our own ¿ extinction?


Des mesures : two sizes: approx. 40.64 x 60.96 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

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Dock and Buoys

Dock and Buoys

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71246

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : two sizes: 35.56 x 55.88 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

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Extinct

Extinct

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71230

Description: From the series: Extinct.

The models in Extinct are animal rights activists. In the Summer of 2003 I photographed these dedicated people in the nude and in the environment. The purpose of the project was to cultivate a visceral connection between our species and the animals that inhabit the planet. Towards that end the final images explored human beings as animals; that we share this planet with other animals and that we too are ultimately vulnerable to our own destructive behavior, both physical and psychological.

To prepare for the photo shoots, and because I would not meet the models until the day of shooting, I asked the participants to fill out a questionnaire that would help me get a better sense of who they were. What is your favorite element and/or type of landscape? What is your favorite animal(s)/totem animals and reason, what is your favorite place on earth; what is most important to you about working in the animal protection movement? The replies were varied, enthusiastic and insightful. I made notes and sketches about each activist and with his or her response in mind, chose an appropriate environment that held some spiritual connection. How I planned to place them in that environment was also strongly influenced by their answers to the questions.

Much of the shooting was done on an extensive and diversified piece of property, home to a donkey sanctuary, in rural Ontario. In some cases I traveled to the activists' special spots where they felt particularly connected, and in many cases they came to my property in northern Ontario.

Extinct uses evolution as allegory. Beginning with immersion in water and progressing through emergence onto land, humankind is seen first basking in, and ultimately hiding from the elements. Extinct portrays humanity in a non-elevated state, stripped of protection, without power, all vulnerable. As both the hunter and the hunted, Man has brought itself and its habitat to the brink of annihilation.

Extinct invites the viewer to reflect on Earth's endangered system and whether it has been irrevocably damaged by our negligence, greed and complacency. Have we become the designers of Earth's ¿ and our own ¿ extinction?


Des mesures : two sizes: approx. 40.64 x 60.96 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

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Sacrificed

Sacrificed

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71236

Description: From the series: Extinct.

The models in Extinct are animal rights activists. In the Summer of 2003 I photographed these dedicated people in the nude and in the environment. The purpose of the project was to cultivate a visceral connection between our species and the animals that inhabit the planet. Towards that end the final images explored human beings as animals; that we share this planet with other animals and that we too are ultimately vulnerable to our own destructive behavior, both physical and psychological.

To prepare for the photo shoots, and because I would not meet the models until the day of shooting, I asked the participants to fill out a questionnaire that would help me get a better sense of who they were. What is your favorite element and/or type of landscape? What is your favorite animal(s)/totem animals and reason, what is your favorite place on earth; what is most important to you about working in the animal protection movement? The replies were varied, enthusiastic and insightful. I made notes and sketches about each activist and with his or her response in mind, chose an appropriate environment that held some spiritual connection. How I planned to place them in that environment was also strongly influenced by their answers to the questions.

Much of the shooting was done on an extensive and diversified piece of property, home to a donkey sanctuary, in rural Ontario. In some cases I traveled to the activists' special spots where they felt particularly connected, and in many cases they came to my property in northern Ontario.

Extinct uses evolution as allegory. Beginning with immersion in water and progressing through emergence onto land, humankind is seen first basking in, and ultimately hiding from the elements. Extinct portrays humanity in a non-elevated state, stripped of protection, without power, all vulnerable. As both the hunter and the hunted, Man has brought itself and its habitat to the brink of annihilation.

Extinct invites the viewer to reflect on Earth's endangered system and whether it has been irrevocably damaged by our negligence, greed and complacency. Have we become the designers of Earth's ¿ and our own ¿ extinction?


Des mesures : two sizes: approx. 40.64 x 60.96 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Solstice

Solstice

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71238

Description: From the series: Extinct.

The models in Extinct are animal rights activists. In the Summer of 2003 I photographed these dedicated people in the nude and in the environment. The purpose of the project was to cultivate a visceral connection between our species and the animals that inhabit the planet. Towards that end the final images explored human beings as animals; that we share this planet with other animals and that we too are ultimately vulnerable to our own destructive behavior, both physical and psychological.

To prepare for the photo shoots, and because I would not meet the models until the day of shooting, I asked the participants to fill out a questionnaire that would help me get a better sense of who they were. What is your favorite element and/or type of landscape? What is your favorite animal(s)/totem animals and reason, what is your favorite place on earth; what is most important to you about working in the animal protection movement? The replies were varied, enthusiastic and insightful. I made notes and sketches about each activist and with his or her response in mind, chose an appropriate environment that held some spiritual connection. How I planned to place them in that environment was also strongly influenced by their answers to the questions.

Much of the shooting was done on an extensive and diversified piece of property, home to a donkey sanctuary, in rural Ontario. In some cases I traveled to the activists' special spots where they felt particularly connected, and in many cases they came to my property in northern Ontario.

Extinct uses evolution as allegory. Beginning with immersion in water and progressing through emergence onto land, humankind is seen first basking in, and ultimately hiding from the elements. Extinct portrays humanity in a non-elevated state, stripped of protection, without power, all vulnerable. As both the hunter and the hunted, Man has brought itself and its habitat to the brink of annihilation.

Extinct invites the viewer to reflect on Earth's endangered system and whether it has been irrevocably damaged by our negligence, greed and complacency. Have we become the designers of Earth's ¿ and our own ¿ extinction?


Des mesures : two sizes: approx. 40.64 x 60.96 cm and 50.8 x 76.2 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2003

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Sink: Beckon

Sink: Beckon

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71224

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2005

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Tarp 2

Tarp 2

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71249

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : 35.56 x 35.56 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2006

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Look 1

Look 1

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71261

Description: Self-portraits

Over twenty-four years, the primary focus of my work has been on self-portraiture. The flexibility of this genre has enabled me to comment not only on the unavoidable and constant changes that occur to our bodies and psyches, but also on similar changes in the world around us. Exploring elements that deeply affect us ¿ memory, the passage of time, denial, connection and renewal ¿ my self-portraits strive to be both universal and intensely personal.

I present my self-portraits in two ways: as singular expressions unto themselves; and in sequence with other images to create photographic narratives. Two such narratives are: my book LifeLines, which offers a symbolic journey through lifeás inevitable cycles by juxtaposing selfáportraits with images of transformation in Nature; and An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle, in which self-portraiture, combined with still life and landscape, personalize and intensify the unsettling content of the narrative.

As long as I have taken self-portraits, I have worked in the historical process of platinum, a medium that enhances the timeless quality in each image while at the same time creating unprecedented elegance in tone and detail. Although platinum is my first choice in technique, in recent years I have explored producing selected self-portraits as iris prints, resulting in images larger in size than is possible through the platinum process.


Des mesures : 25.4 x 30.48 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2006

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Sink: Ponder

Sink: Ponder

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71226

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2006

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Sink: Edge

Sink: Edge

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71225

Description: From the series: An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle

Old people call it "the hour of the wolf"
It's the hour when most people die,
when most children are born.
Now is when nightmares come to us.
And if we're awake.... we're afraid....
we're afraid....


Hour of the Wolf (1968) Ingmar Bergman

An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle is a collection of narrative sequences: Unease, Clipped, Sink et Vigil. Each consists of juxtaposed images that create a travelogue of the psyche.

As self-portraits combine with landscapes and still-lifes, the nightmares in An Hour of the Wolf become both personal and universal in nature. Each depicts our apprehensions, a disquieting human situation, a period of unease. Each examines the thoughts and fears that may haunt us during an "hour of the wolf."

Unease explores loss of identity and self, entrapment and confusion and the line between what is real and what is imagined.

Clipped addresses the desire to escape and the realization that it is impossible.

Sink embodies the fears of hopelessness, of feeling overwhelmed and alone in quiet despair.

Vigil tells of waiting for something that never comes.


Des mesures : approx. 50.8 x 50.8 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2006

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Gallop

Gallop

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71268

Description:

Des mesures : 35.56 x 35.56 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2006

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Look 2

Look 2

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71262

Description: Self-portraits

Over twenty-four years, the primary focus of my work has been on self-portraiture. The flexibility of this genre has enabled me to comment not only on the unavoidable and constant changes that occur to our bodies and psyches, but also on similar changes in the world around us. Exploring elements that deeply affect us ¿ memory, the passage of time, denial, connection and renewal ¿ my self-portraits strive to be both universal and intensely personal.

I present my self-portraits in two ways: as singular expressions unto themselves; and in sequence with other images to create photographic narratives. Two such narratives are: my book LifeLines, which offers a symbolic journey through lifeás inevitable cycles by juxtaposing selfáportraits with images of transformation in Nature; and An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle, in which self-portraiture, combined with still life and landscape, personalize and intensify the unsettling content of the narrative.

As long as I have taken self-portraits, I have worked in the historical process of platinum, a medium that enhances the timeless quality in each image while at the same time creating unprecedented elegance in tone and detail. Although platinum is my first choice in technique, in recent years I have explored producing selected self-portraits as iris prints, resulting in images larger in size than is possible through the platinum process.


Des mesures : 25.4 x 30.48 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2006

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Look 3

Look 3

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71263

Description: Self-portraits

Over twenty-four years, the primary focus of my work has been on self-portraiture. The flexibility of this genre has enabled me to comment not only on the unavoidable and constant changes that occur to our bodies and psyches, but also on similar changes in the world around us. Exploring elements that deeply affect us ¿ memory, the passage of time, denial, connection and renewal ¿ my self-portraits strive to be both universal and intensely personal.

I present my self-portraits in two ways: as singular expressions unto themselves; and in sequence with other images to create photographic narratives. Two such narratives are: my book LifeLines, which offers a symbolic journey through lifeás inevitable cycles by juxtaposing selfáportraits with images of transformation in Nature; and An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle, in which self-portraiture, combined with still life and landscape, personalize and intensify the unsettling content of the narrative.

As long as I have taken self-portraits, I have worked in the historical process of platinum, a medium that enhances the timeless quality in each image while at the same time creating unprecedented elegance in tone and detail. Although platinum is my first choice in technique, in recent years I have explored producing selected self-portraits as iris prints, resulting in images larger in size than is possible through the platinum process.


Des mesures : 25.4 x 33.02 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2006

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Tarp

Tarp

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71250

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : 35.56 x 35.56 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2006

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Promenade

Promenade

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71248

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : 35.56 x 35.56 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2006

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Look 6

Look 6

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71266

Description: Self-portraits

Over twenty-four years, the primary focus of my work has been on self-portraiture. The flexibility of this genre has enabled me to comment not only on the unavoidable and constant changes that occur to our bodies and psyches, but also on similar changes in the world around us. Exploring elements that deeply affect us ¿ memory, the passage of time, denial, connection and renewal ¿ my self-portraits strive to be both universal and intensely personal.

I present my self-portraits in two ways: as singular expressions unto themselves; and in sequence with other images to create photographic narratives. Two such narratives are: my book LifeLines, which offers a symbolic journey through lifeás inevitable cycles by juxtaposing selfáportraits with images of transformation in Nature; and An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle, in which self-portraiture, combined with still life and landscape, personalize and intensify the unsettling content of the narrative.

As long as I have taken self-portraits, I have worked in the historical process of platinum, a medium that enhances the timeless quality in each image while at the same time creating unprecedented elegance in tone and detail. Although platinum is my first choice in technique, in recent years I have explored producing selected self-portraits as iris prints, resulting in images larger in size than is possible through the platinum process.


Des mesures : 23.495 x 35.56 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2006

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Look 5

Look 5

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71265

Description: Self-portraits

Over twenty-four years, the primary focus of my work has been on self-portraiture. The flexibility of this genre has enabled me to comment not only on the unavoidable and constant changes that occur to our bodies and psyches, but also on similar changes in the world around us. Exploring elements that deeply affect us ¿ memory, the passage of time, denial, connection and renewal ¿ my self-portraits strive to be both universal and intensely personal.

I present my self-portraits in two ways: as singular expressions unto themselves; and in sequence with other images to create photographic narratives. Two such narratives are: my book LifeLines, which offers a symbolic journey through lifeás inevitable cycles by juxtaposing selfáportraits with images of transformation in Nature; and An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle, in which self-portraiture, combined with still life and landscape, personalize and intensify the unsettling content of the narrative.

As long as I have taken self-portraits, I have worked in the historical process of platinum, a medium that enhances the timeless quality in each image while at the same time creating unprecedented elegance in tone and detail. Although platinum is my first choice in technique, in recent years I have explored producing selected self-portraits as iris prints, resulting in images larger in size than is possible through the platinum process.


Des mesures : 23.495 x 35.56 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2006

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Look 4

Look 4

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71264

Description: Self-portraits

Over twenty-four years, the primary focus of my work has been on self-portraiture. The flexibility of this genre has enabled me to comment not only on the unavoidable and constant changes that occur to our bodies and psyches, but also on similar changes in the world around us. Exploring elements that deeply affect us ¿ memory, the passage of time, denial, connection and renewal ¿ my self-portraits strive to be both universal and intensely personal.

I present my self-portraits in two ways: as singular expressions unto themselves; and in sequence with other images to create photographic narratives. Two such narratives are: my book LifeLines, which offers a symbolic journey through lifeás inevitable cycles by juxtaposing selfáportraits with images of transformation in Nature; and An Hour of the Wolf: Nightmare Quadrangle, in which self-portraiture, combined with still life and landscape, personalize and intensify the unsettling content of the narrative.

As long as I have taken self-portraits, I have worked in the historical process of platinum, a medium that enhances the timeless quality in each image while at the same time creating unprecedented elegance in tone and detail. Although platinum is my first choice in technique, in recent years I have explored producing selected self-portraits as iris prints, resulting in images larger in size than is possible through the platinum process.


Des mesures : 25.4 x 36.83 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2006

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Slide

Slide

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71253

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : 35.56 x 35.56 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2007

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Drive In

Drive In

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71251

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : 35.56 x 55.88 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2007

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Puddles

Puddles

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71252

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : 35.56 x 55.88 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2007

Matériaux :

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Moorings

Moorings

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71255

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : 35.56 x 35.56 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2008

Matériaux :

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You Must Be

You Must Be

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71257

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : 35.56 x 35.56 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2008

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Candy Floss

Candy Floss

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71260

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : 35.56 x 35.56 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2008

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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Warning

Warning

Artist: Elizabeth Siegfried

ID : 71256

Description: From the series: Off Season

The images in Off Season explore usually active locations during times of dormancy.

As a body of work, Off Season conjures a curious state of ambiguity and indecision: has something ended or is something about to begin? Here there is no certainty, only the timeless hovering that reflects the past while at the same time suggesting a future; an unsettling quietness that inspires both melancholy and hope. Ultimately only the passage of time will reveal whether we have slipped into a temporary hibernation or an eternal off season.


Des mesures : 35.56 x 35.56 cm

Collection:

Date de réalisation : 2008

Matériaux :

Collection virtuelle :

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