a new earth

A New Earth, inspired by The Fall of the Rebel Angels by sixteenth century artist Pieter Bruegel the Elder, is also a philosophical critique of Bruegel’s painting. The Fall of the Rebel Angels is a Renaissance work, created at a time when the physical world was regarded as fallen and evil, and heaven was seen as a place outside of rather than immanent in the material world. European explorers were returning from far-off places with plants and animals never seen before, and Bruegel portrays a chaotic natural world, populated by the strange flora and fauna he is seeing in Europe for the first time. The rebel angels are damned and Gabriel condemns them to this fallen world. In A New Earth we see a subversion of the idea that the spiritual world lies outside of and separate from a natural world that harbours evil. The composition turns Bruegel’s composition on its head, with Christ’s discarded grave clothes at the bottom. His resurrection symbolises the resurrection of all creation, restored to its original beauty and variety: a heaven on earth.

Keiskamma Artist Words
A New Earth

2018

Dense embroidery and appliqué on cotton

1.1 m high x 1.56 m wide

Carol Hofmeyr, Hamburg, Eastern Cape

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