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"Rose’s Woe" by Larysa Myers features monochromatic tones with fluid lines and organic shapes forming a mysterious, introspective composition. The drawing portrays a silhouetted figure, a hand obscuring part of their face, surrounded by intricate floral patterns, suggesting themes of concealment and femininity. Myers employs a rhythmic pattern technique, evoking a dreamlike quality that blends the personal with the archetypal. The artwork, reflecting her focus on identity and vulnerability through symbolic imagery, invites contemplation of the complexities of feminine experience and identity. Myers' nocturnal imagination lends the piece its haunting, poetic depth. ...
Larysa Myers fuses personal history with universal myths, conjuring images where the cyclical rhythms of life and identity unfold in haunting, dreamlike scenes. Her work reflects on motherhood, femininity, and their inherent dualities, often reducing the body to silhouetted female archetypes that are manipulated and transformed. Her settings vary from domestic and mundane to wild and fantastical, each opening into different facets of psyche and identity. Drawing from imagination influenced by memory, emotion, symbolism, and nature, Myers’ practice unfolds nocturnally—invoking subconscious dreams and night scenes. Repetitive patterns and lines characterize her mark-making, fostering a slow, reflective state that infuses her drawings and paintings with poetic depth. This rhythmical approach invites contemplation of identity, vulnerability, and the passage of time. Through layered imagery and symbolic gestures, Myers creates intimate, evocative works that navigate the complex interplay between the personal and the archetypal, the visible and the hidden. ...