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Ana Barriga. From Animals to Gods
As the artist explains, “It’s a group portrait with seven heads, a number based on Russian nesting dolls. Each head that’s opened reveals its related beginnings, and therefore the interaction that exists between different forces, terminating at one end in a skull as a symbol of death. Holding the heads to keep them from falling, two allegories of Cerberus, who guards the gates of the underworld to prevent the dead from escaping, also act as buttresses of a fictional temple framing the central scene, which is flanked on either side by two symbolic realms, heaven and hell. The crowning element at the top is love, and spray-paintings in the background strip the characters of their gravity, mocking them in favour of liberty.” The single picture hanging on the front wall of the former Chapel of Mary Magdalene shows a scene in which Adam and Eve reappear, according to the artist, “in a kind of unreal depiction, somewhere between the body of a dog and a pig, symbolically offering an image that attempts to elaborate on the human condition”. Meanwhile, beside the totemic symbol of a large cross, we see “painted friezes that depict Carthusian monks in relation to the artist’s own interests, resulting in familiar figures from popular culture such as the Judas bag, Mister Potato Head or the pop singer Maluma”.
VIRTUAL TOUR
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