Style1½ inches thick (3.75 cm) Product Details Artist grade canvas, archival inks, wooden stretcher bars, and UVB protective coating
AvailablityUsually ships within five business days. ArtistEmily Colosimo Platinum Member CollectionFineArt
Description When any outbreak (war or disease) starts we are exposed to its simplistic struggles over good versus evil. Such resonant aspects makes one look upon angels to help mend ones wounds, restore past catastrophes and put an end to their continuance into the future. Some believe that to end their physical pains they may want to join the angels in a heaven and be free of their concerns of the flesh. When this happens we lose faith. Paradise becomes lost as we reject religious principles, and defy oracular responses though more concerning with global rather than personal implications of a coming apocalypse. Whatever our support system human beings progress and that movement, and migration is modernity. Not necessarily historical, technological, environmental or evolutionary but rather the advancements of personal growth, wisdom, self-knowledge and political or legal system. From there we question our individual life chances such as expectancy and risk of disease and disability. Human beings will always choose life and their own individual progress.Paradise will be lost as we come to view our human existence as a kind of painful progress, longing for what weve left behind and dreaming ahead. Instead we should look to optimism in order to avoid a dismal picture. Despite disease and horrors, or that we always seem to repeat the tragedies of our own past, there is always a glimmer of hope as we look to angels for things to get better no matter the circumstances.
Emily Colosimo, Toronto Member Since July 2012 Artist Statement Emily grew up in a Canadian Italian Family where her mother was a talented seamstress/pattern designer and her father's hobby was redesigning cars. Her dad once envisioned an alternative fuel vehicle over 40 years ago. All of her siblings inherited much of their talents. Her first artwork was a lighthouse drawn when she was 4 years old. From that point on she was destined to become an architect. Sketching, painting and currently digital artwork has become her passive leisure. From Landscape Architect to Advertising Art Director Emily uses her artistic tools to envision her ideas.