"Drawing Wheel" by David Glynn
Details:
6000 x 8214 pixels
300 DPI
Original Art Work
2017
Website: Museum.io Collections on OpenSea
About the Artist:
David Glynn
David Glynn's art and photography have been shown in international exhibitions since the 90’s, and his paintings and prints are in many collections including the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, UK. Glynn has taught in the digital media department at Otis College of Art and has been recognized with a teaching award at the Los Angeles County High School for the Arts. Born in Boston, Glynn studied at the Rhode Island School of Design, The San Francisco Art Institute and the Massachusetts College of Art. He lives and works in Los Angeles.
Breaking Wheel project Statement:
“...I’m going to beat my woman until I get satisfied.”-Robert Johnson, Me and the Devil Blues (recorded June 20, 1937 in Dallas, Texas)
David Glynn’s Breaking Wheel Project examines the cycle of shame experienced by women who are victims of domestic violence, sexual abuse and/or cultural oppression. As a means of breaking the cycle, Glynn boldly presents female figures as modern day martyrs who confront abuse and adversity by revealing truths that can no longer remain silent. Through hand embellished photographs and paintings, Glynn portrays nude (though modestly draped with fabric), heavily tattooed women whose bodies are awkwardly threaded throughout bicycle frames and shackled with heavy chains. For additional impact, Glynn fabricates tattoos onto his subjects that feature intuited thoughts on abuse.
The Breaking Wheel Project connects the past to the present through multiple archetypes of women such as patron saints, Suicide Girls (women with heavy tattoos and piercings), and modern day Mother Theresa figures. One notable discovery, found while researching Michelangelo, is Catherine of Alexandria, a virgin martyr saint from the Roman Empire. Said to be born into a noble family, Catherine was a philosopher and scholar. After having a vision of the Virgin and Child, she was sentenced to death by the Breaking Wheel—a wagon wheel to which victims would be tied and chained to the spokes, and then beaten until all their bones were broken.When Catherine was brought before the wheel and touched it, it shattered. Although she escaped the cycle of torture, this technique was later named for her and was used throughout Europe into the 19th century. In a contemporary context, Glynn re-imagines the tortuous Breaking Wheel with Suicide Girls who embody the role of current survivors, and the a.k.a. “modern-day Mother Teresas,” working to shatter the effects of oppression and the deeply rooted shame that continues to feed it. Breaking the cycle of shame and abuse requires unlearning judgment, and relearning the importance of civil rights and justice. In this current age of anxiety and unresolved gender politics, the Breaking Wheel Project aims to awaken the survivor in all of us so that we can confront abuse without fear, and possibly through means of a higher power.