IVRE (DRUNK)
Référence :
Drawing by Corinne Tichadou representing a peacock feather and the word Ivre. Frame in gilded wood patinated under glass.
Length : 10.24 in / 26 cm
Height : 12.6 in / 32 cm
Width : 0.79 in / 2 cm
Weigth : 2.2 lb / 1 kg
Artist : Corinne Tichadou
Inspiration: Peacock feathers have a long history in art, symbolizing beauty, wealth, and spirituality. In ancient cultures, peacock feathers were often associated with deities or mythological figures because of their brilliance and elegance. They were used in royal clothing, crowns, and ornaments to express status and power. Artists like Albrecht Dürer and Sandro Botticelli incorporated peacock feathers into their works to add color and texture.
Corinne Tichadou weaves links between the past and the present. She paints the human and questions his relationship to the world: to love, to family, to his courage, to his destiny, to his place in society. Man has always been surrounded by doubts and fears rooted in the world around him. His characters echo memory, fragility, the strangeness of the soul, vulnerability, melancholy, intimacy and silence. It is a world of thought.
Mediums : Oil, pastels and ink
Support: Paper
Frame: Antique gilded wood, under glass
Dimensions: 17 x 8 (32 x 26 cm framed)
Guarantee of authenticity: Signed and issued with a certificate of authenticity
Corinne Tichadou
France
Corinne Tichadou is a female painter working and living in Beziers, Southern France. Her painting is contemporary, figurative, mythological, biblical, allegorical and contemplative. It weaves links between the past and the present. Through mythology, tales, theatre, opera, biblical stories and her love for Italian Renaissance painting, she seeks timelessness as a philosophy. She paints the human being and questions it about its relationship to the world: to love, to family, to its courage, to its destiny, to its place in society.