برچسب: Narrative

  • Through Surreal Paintings, Shyama Golden Reincarnates a Mythic Narrative — Colossal

    Through Surreal Paintings, Shyama Golden Reincarnates a Mythic Narrative — Colossal


    When Shyama Golden would find herself disappointed as a child, her parents would often respond with “too bad, so sad, maybe next birth.” Invoking reincarnation and the possibilities of an alternative life, this phrase continues to reinvent itself in Golden’s practice.

    On view next month at PM/AM, Too Bad, So Sad, Maybe Next Birth presents a collection of lush paintings filled with surreal details, earthly textures, and a recurring blue-faced character. As with earlier series, the artist invents a vast, magical narrative that flows through each of the works, this time as a four-act performance.

    a figure with green fur and a blue face sits in a surreal garden with a hand stretching out from a bush
    “Bevis Bawa Garden, 1936” (2025), oil on linen, 72 x 60 inches

    The mythical storyline unfolds with a collection of diptychs comprised of a large-scale scene and a close-up companion offering another perspective. These pairings visualize a sort of alternative past for the artist as she explores the inexorable twining of personal agency and larger forces like fate and collective experiences that shape our identities.

    In Too Bad, So Sad, Maybe Next Birth, Golden opens with her blue-faced alter ego named Maya, a rendition of the Sri Lankan folklore tricksters known as yakkas. Dressed in a fur suit, the character lies in the roadway, her chest split open to reveal a bright red wound. A bag of oranges is littered nearby.

    The counterpart to this titular work is a self-portrait of the artist barefoot, posed against the rocky roadside. She stands atop cracked pavement while oranges spill blood-red juice on the ground. Introspective yet invoking the universal, the pair grasps at the tension between unexpected violence and death, whether metaphoric or real, and the ability to find resilience in the face of adversity.

    Golden’s series continues to unravel as a series of contrasts. She considers fame, erasure, and where freedom resides within the two, along with the notion of sole creative geniuses mistakenly thought to operate outside the whole. And in “Mexican Texas, 1862,” the artist tackles the porous, if not arbitrarily drawn, boundaries that tie us to states and nations and ultimately, change over time.

    a woman in a yellow tank top and yellow pants stands barefoot against a green and blue tinged rocky background
    “Stories of My Death Have Been Greatly Exaggerated” (2025), oil on linen, 72 x 36 inches

    In addition to her oil paintings for this exhibition, Golden is collaborating on an animated video project with her husband, the director Paul Trillo, who will build an AI model trained exclusively on Golden’s paintings. Given the hesitation by many artists about the role of artificial intelligence and intellectual property, the pair is interested in confronting the issue from the perspective of influence and the myth of the lone genius. Golden writes:

    Many artists who are canonized are actually working in a style that they didn’t invent but that was part of a movement arising out of their time and location. AI is deeply unsettling to artists in the West because we romanticise the artist as a singular figure, who is only influenced by one to three other clearly defined artists, giving them a lineage of artistic inheritance and perceived value.

    Golden also ties this idea to “the clout needed to command a price for our work,” which she suggests is simply another narrative device in the act of self-mythologizing.

    If you’re in London, Too Bad, So Sad, Maybe Next Birth runs from May 23 to July 1. Find more from Golden on her website and Instagram.

    a furry figure with a blue face lies on a pink landscape with a horse galloping away in the background
    “Mexican Texas, 1862” (2025), oil on linen, 72 x 60 inches
    a figure in yellow stands atop a giant blue head floating in the sky. she holds onto trees, one full of fruit and the other barren
    “A Myth of My Own Creation” (2025), oil on linen, 66 x 48 inches
    the back of a brown mask atop a pink tinged streetscape
    “You Seeing What I’m Seeing” (2025), oil on linen, 48 x 48 inches
    a green bird appears to see itself in a mirror against a purple backdrop
    “The Sound of One Bird Colliding” (2025), oil on linen, 24 x 30 inches





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  • Art With Mr. E: Sunday Devotional With Mr. E: The Narrative


    Narrative art tells a story.  I love challenging students to create interesting original narratives.  They have to truly think through what their story is, and how to best share it with the viewer.  A narrative is at its best when it considers the setting (environment), characters (people that it involves), and plot (what’s happening).  I ask students to periodically stop and share their work with their neighbor.  If their neighbor is unable to convey what is going on in the story, then the artist knows they must reconsider/rethink what they are doing so that they can have their work tell the story more effectively.

    But in your hearts revere Christ as Lord.  Always be prepared to give an answer to everyone who asks you to give the reason for the hope that you have.  But do this with gentleness and respect, keeping a clear conscience, so that those who speak maliciously against your good behavior in Christ may be ashamed of their slander.  1 Peter 3: 15-16

    Have you ever been asked to share your “testimony”(your faith story)?  For some, the idea of doing such a thing is extremely scary.  Others might think they could do it with ease, but quickly realize when doing so that they lack direction/focus, and are unable to effectively share their journey of faith.  No matter where you find yourself on this spectrum, being able to share your story is an important “tool” that the Lord wants to use in your life & the life of others.  Like the narrative art work I have my students create, you must think through your story and consider how best to share it with others.  You don’t want it to sound scripted/canned…but we must be ready in & out of season to give account for our hope!  Writing it down, sharing it with a friend, and thinking upon what you are sharing will allow you to refine it & effectively convey your story   I also feel it will allow you to reflect on God’s love & faithfulness in your life. That is a WIN-WIN situation.

    The Easter Story is on our hearts & minds right now….
    but I want to know how the

     Easter Story has impacted your story!  

    Dear Lord…you have blessed me with a story to share.  Thank you for the testimony you have given me.  I know it your story of grace, love, and hope.  Something our world needs to hear.  Allow me to effectively & fearlessly share the reason for my hope.  Help me to glory you through the story of my life.  And may I see that it is not finished, but still unfolding as I go & grow in you.

     Amen



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