Tiger in a Tropical Storm
In the painting 'Tiger in a Tropical Storm', the viewer has happened upon a scene, perhaps hiding from the growling shiny-toothed tiger or sheltering beneath the palm trees from the blustering monsoon. The self-taught artist, Henri Rousseau, created this work without ever leaving Paris. With the taxidermized animals and exotic flora at the Jardin des Plantes as visual scaffolds, he imagined a mysterious dream-like tension between the crouching tiger, the verdant jungle and the violent storm. 'Tiger in a Tropical Storm' was exoticism for the 'La Belle 脡poque' Parisian viewer, who escaped from the bustling city into an enchanted world of figuration and fantasy.
In current times, we face social isolation, the longing to travel, and the monotony of working from home. People have turned to imagination and nature as escapism from the trivialities of confinement and the communal grief of a global pandemic. Our surroundings have been reformed or exchanged through illusion and fantasies, and we break free from our current banal conditions into happiness, excitement, or adventure.
Paradoxically, our inability to physically travel has allowed nature to blossom and roam. Located in Sardinia for fourteen years, Louise Alexander Gallery is rooted within the unique aura of the island, the large swathes of uninhabited territory and mistral winds evoke the mind and unsettle the senses. Much like Rousseau's painting, the wild environment of Sardinia conveys a sense of whimsical disorientation.
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In the painting 'Tiger in a Tropical Storm', the viewer has happened upon a scene, perhaps hiding from the growling shiny-toothed tiger or sheltering beneath the palm trees from the blustering monsoon. The self-taught artist, Henri Rousseau, created this work without ever leaving Paris. With the taxidermized animals and exotic flora at the Jardin des Plantes as visual scaffolds, he imagined a mysterious dream-like tension between the crouching tiger, the verdant jungle and the violent storm. 'Tiger in a Tropical Storm' was exoticism for the 'La Belle 脡poque' Parisian viewer, who escaped from the bustling city into an enchanted world of figuration and fantasy.
In current times, we face social isolation, the longing to travel, and the monotony of working from home. People have turned to imagination and nature as escapism from the trivialities of confinement and the communal grief of a global pandemic. Our surroundings have been reformed or exchanged through illusion and fantasies, and we break free from our current banal conditions into happiness, excitement, or adventure.
Paradoxically, our inability to physically travel has allowed nature to blossom and roam. Located in Sardinia for fourteen years, Louise Alexander Gallery is rooted within the unique aura of the island, the large swathes of uninhabited territory and mistral winds evoke the mind and unsettle the senses. Much like Rousseau's painting, the wild environment of Sardinia conveys a sense of whimsical disorientation.
Artists on show
- :mentalKLINIK
- Amy Bessone
- Djordje Ozbolt
- Enrique Martínez Celaya
- Folkert de Jong
- Henri Rousseau
- J.P. Munro
- Jie Wu
- Laurie Nye
- Martyn Cross
- Mary Herbert
- Max Jansons
- Peter Böhnisch
- Pierre Fichefeux
- Prisca M. Monnier
- Ryan Mosley
- Saelia Aparicio Torinos
- Sky Glabush
- Sophie Vallance Cantor
- Sophie Varin
- Stefan Rinck
- Uwe Henneken
- Vuk Vidor