It is by nature rather than design that this breast cancer cell has vivid pinks in it. It is amazing that this is the colour so associated with femininity. Almost everything that is associated with the female form has a predominantly pink colour.
My wife loves pink, she says that is lifts her heart no matter what the object is - a cup, scarf, dress, flower, sheet of paper and lots more besides.
From birth onwards pink is associated with little girls and as they grow their tastes develop for other colours but still the world envelops them in pink.
Strange though it may sound I found this painting really pleasant and easy to do. The pink colour just flowed freely and the shapes seem to take on a life of their own. This is bizarrely ironic as this would seem to describe the growth of breast cancer also. It takes on a life of its own and is constantly sending out tendrils to attach to new tissue and establish itself in new areas.
I am intrigued by the attractiveness of this canecr cell. It looks like a beautiful full-headed flower in a garden that is full of life and energy in early summer. I like the boldness and wildness of the rich pink core with tendrils of white and red interlaced around the central growth.
Many images and associations go through my mind when I look at this painting. It looks like a big pink sun radiating energy and growth. It also looks like a multi-legged octopus reaching out and trying to latch on to new tissue where it can spawn new cells and grow larger, longer, bigger, further.
I think also that it captures well the lump of growth that women are constantly reminded to check for and get scanned if they feel anything out of the ordinary. There is a certain solidity and lumpiness to the shape and yet it also has a certain jelly-fish quality that it will distend and distort as it is sqeezed or pressed. All the tendrils seem to convey the menacing nature of cancer, where it is constantly seeking new areas of growth and will attack healthy tissue to support its cancerous growth.
The painting is small (40cm X 40cm, 16 inches X 16 inches) but it still captures well the menacing nature of breast cancer. It is an oil on canvas painting and I find that oil colours are super for capturing energy, growth, movement and light. This is just one cell portrayed in all its energy and growth, ready to reach out and grow further, feeding off the healthy tissue around it.
A beautiful but dangerous devil.
My wife loves pink, she says that is lifts her heart no matter what the object is - a cup, scarf, dress, flower, sheet of paper and lots more besides.
From birth onwards pink is associated with little girls and as they grow their tastes develop for other colours but still the world envelops them in pink.
Strange though it may sound I found this painting really pleasant and easy to do. The pink colour just flowed freely and the shapes seem to take on a life of their own. This is bizarrely ironic as this would seem to describe the growth of breast cancer also. It takes on a life of its own and is constantly sending out tendrils to attach to new tissue and establish itself in new areas.
I am intrigued by the attractiveness of this canecr cell. It looks like a beautiful full-headed flower in a garden that is full of life and energy in early summer. I like the boldness and wildness of the rich pink core with tendrils of white and red interlaced around the central growth.
Many images and associations go through my mind when I look at this painting. It looks like a big pink sun radiating energy and growth. It also looks like a multi-legged octopus reaching out and trying to latch on to new tissue where it can spawn new cells and grow larger, longer, bigger, further.
I think also that it captures well the lump of growth that women are constantly reminded to check for and get scanned if they feel anything out of the ordinary. There is a certain solidity and lumpiness to the shape and yet it also has a certain jelly-fish quality that it will distend and distort as it is sqeezed or pressed. All the tendrils seem to convey the menacing nature of cancer, where it is constantly seeking new areas of growth and will attack healthy tissue to support its cancerous growth.
The painting is small (40cm X 40cm, 16 inches X 16 inches) but it still captures well the menacing nature of breast cancer. It is an oil on canvas painting and I find that oil colours are super for capturing energy, growth, movement and light. This is just one cell portrayed in all its energy and growth, ready to reach out and grow further, feeding off the healthy tissue around it.
A beautiful but dangerous devil.