Too Blue Eggs
Oil on paper
31 x 23 cms
1997
Two egg shapes painted onto paper in two different shades of blue.
This is a melancholy drawing made by the artist and then rejected. The artist originally threw this piece away because he felt something wasn’t quite right but then rescued it from the bin because something different felt right. Perhaps its importance to him lay not in the original intention but on a different track – he changed his mind. He says that he will never sell this piece.
Exhibitions
Essays
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Eggs - Martine Rouleau
SHOW
Eggs - Martine Rouleau
Eggs incarnate pure balance. Their harmonious simplicity of form is only rendered more poignant by their function: they hold and protect life. The strength of the shell that harbours the makings of a living creature is all the more impressive because although it can withstand surprising levels of pressure – the egg of the ostrich is reputed to support up to 20 stone – it can not resist the impact of a drop or a knock. Once the ovoid shape has been cracked by an external force, the life it was meant to protect no longer exists. Once it is broken from the inside, this life begins. Although the shell itself is made of minerals, essentially calcium, and can sometimes have the rough texture of a stone, it also has thousands of pores through which oxygen can get to the embryo.
The nurturing virtues of the egg have carried over to various cultural beliefs. Although eggs are most often perceived as tokens of affection, exchanged as an expression of love by the Alsatians or used to announce the forthcoming birth of a child by the Chinese, they are sometimes destroyed as a form of protection. Indeed, the