"Seers can see, for instance, the light of the scarabs, emanations expanding to great size." - Carlos Castenada, from The Fire From Within
Mark Innerst is known for paintings of luminous landscapes so it is possible to see in Scarab-Like a portal to another time and place. He has used the beetle shape as a frame for a star-flecked night sky through a scrim of trees. The gem-like tints are true to history; blue was the most common color for glazes. A divine manifestation of the early morning sky.
In Egypt by about 2055 BCE an impression of a beetle, called a scarab was a sought-after amulet that was believed to bring good luck to its owner. It was often worn in the form of a ring. The term scarab comes from Scarabaeus sacer, the family name for ding beetles. Rolling a ball of dung was likened to the heavenly cycle of regeneration.
Image: Mark Innerst - Scarab-Like, 1992, oil and acrylic on panel, Munson Williams Proctor Arts Institute, Utica.
2 comments:
This painting is quite mysterious. (It's impossible for me not to relate this to the work of Jan Fabre with thousands of beetle elytra - fascinating colors and an artistic practice that continues to disturb me, for various reasons.)
Tania. I agree. This painting is strange but I like the colors the artist uses.
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