Tuesday, December 06, 2022

That Animal Is Screwed: Walton Ford's Paintings of Paintings of Animals


Lucy Jakub, NYRB, December 2018:
".....It was the lion known to the Roman, British, and French empires, and the one that MGM took as its dynamic logo—the king of beasts, which for all of Western civilization has embodied strength, courage, and nobility. But it’s a doubtful honor; as Ford has put it, “when humans become stalker/lovers of a certain animal, that animal is screwed.”
Each painting in the series is based on an encounter, historical or imagined, between lions and people. Continuing a long preoccupation of Ford’s, these often have an overt anti-colonialist and anti-imperialist edge that is poignantly mirrored in the dynamic between humans and their animal conquests. Ford punctures Jean-Léon Gérôme’s sensational depictions of the Venatio in the Circus Maximus with MVNERA, which shows a lion cowering in the elevator shaft that brought animals into the arena...."



The Christians’ Last Prayer in the Circus Maximus, 1883

Artist: Jean Leon Gerome (1824–1904)


Artist: Walton Ford, 2018 

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