ERIN CHAPLIN, Field (brown grass)
Oil on canvas, 73 x 62 cm
‘I feel like I am living between worlds. Reality, fantasy and my own reality. And time is ticking
on in the background. Still life resonates with me because it’s on the clock too. Flowers and
fruit can be arranged and painted to live forever but they will die and rot. This comforts me. I
don’t want anything to be too perfect or too alive because that’s not realistic.’
Erin Chaplin studies the relationship between the natural and the artificial in her work, striving
to capture the poignancy of youth as it fades – fresh fruit and flowers as they slowly rot. In
response to the challenging nature of the genre, the floral still-life works are executed in a
combination of muted tones and unexpected, contrived colours. The contrast of these tones
creates a dynamism in the work that entices and surprises the viewer. In her impasto paintings,
a metaphor grows to encapsulate the delicate rawness and vulnerability of the human
condition as we grapple with life as it unfolds.