Bitter Sweet
Gold-covered Skull, Ceramic Plate, Butterfly
20cm x 30cm
2014
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Although in modern western cultures death is considered to be final and therefore it is perceived as a tragic event, this is not the case in indigenous societies and in mythical thinking. Life and death are not taken as mutually exclusive and as total opposites but as two forms of being. The continuity of life and death – expressed by the paradoxical notion of ‘life after death’ – allows these cultural forms to consider death in a much less tragic way. In some Latin-American cultures the Day of the Dead is celebrated as a sort of festival. The skull sculptures engage in a dialogue with both the modern western and the indigenous mythical forms of dealing with death. The sculpture is a mixed media object and injects a humorous element into the morbid situation.