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Paintings

Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Christophe Canato, Homo Faber - Siguë, 2022

Christophe Canato

Homo Faber - Siguë, 2022
Inkjet print on Hahnemühle photo rag paper 308 gsm
Glitter, silver/gold/copper leaves applications

Frame untreated wood, non-reflective glass
Print only also available
80 x 80 cm
Edition 1/5
AU$ 3,600.00
View on a Wall
In his long-standing research on the male gender, Christophe Canato uses the medium of photography to deliver minimal compositions in the past but for the first time with the Homo...
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In his long-standing research on the
male gender, Christophe Canato uses the medium of photography to deliver
minimal compositions in the past but for the first time with the Homo Faber
series his works seem messy and complex.





These patchworks composed of
photographs from Canato's image bank combined with other existing images propose
digital collages that include fragments of male bodies, including human
skeleton and human anatomy imagery, flora, wildlife, religious and political
symbols as well as medical objects such as lobotomy tools.






Each work from this series has an
under title including a flora name as the artist's personal reference. Canato's
digital collage refers to flora and biology and reveals human bodies in
metamorphosis as if to remind us where we all come from. His compositions
include tools used for lobotomization and skulls damaged by this medical
intervention. Juge wig and religious symbols represent the authority, glitters
and high heels could represent the decadence.






Christophe Canato’s research questions the notion of belonging or
rejection and the status that man is supposed to hold in society. In Latin literature, Appius Claudius Caecus uses
term Home Faber in his Sententiæ, referring to the ability of man
to control his destiny and what surrounds him: Homo faber suae quisque
fortunae
("Every man is the artifex of his destiny").

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OFFMARKET Gallery acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of the land on which we operate, the Whadjuk People of the Noongar Nation and pay our respects to Elders past, present and emerging. We celebrate the stories, culture and traditions of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Elders of all communities who also work and live on this land. 2024 © OFFMARKET Gallery.
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