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Description
Mirror Mirror
Virginia Cohn Parkum, c. Unknown
In Mirror Mirror, Virginia Cohn Parkum turns the act of looking inward into …
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Mirror Mirror
Virginia Cohn Parkum, c. Unknown
In Mirror Mirror, Virginia Cohn Parkum turns the act of looking inward into something uneasy, unstable, and deeply human. A seated female figure occupies the center of the composition, her body constructed through swift, layered strokes of blue, violet, and muted flesh tones. Where the face should anchor identity, there is only a dark, faceless void. This absence transforms the figure from an individual into a site of reflection itself — a body present, an identity withheld.
The surrounding field burns in saturated red, pressing inward like emotional atmosphere rather than physical space. This color does not describe a room; it suggests psychic heat, urgency, or exposure. Against this charged ground, cooler blue and teal strokes trace the figure’s limbs and torso, creating a tension between interior stillness and external intensity. The paint moves quickly, almost restlessly, as if the body is being revised in real time.
Parkum’s brushwork resists finish. Paint drips from the lower torso and thigh, implying dissolution rather than solidity. The figure appears to be forming and unforming at once — a body held together only by gesture and light. This instability echoes the painting’s title: mirrors promise clarity, but what they often reveal is fragmentation, doubt, and the gap between how one appears and how one feels.
A small reflective form near the lower right — suggestive of a mirror, vessel, or lens — introduces a secondary site of reflection. It sits outside the body, yet visually echoes the hollow where the face should be. The repetition suggests that self-recognition is never singular; it occurs through external objects, social gaze, and internal scrutiny. The self is both seen and displaced.
Within Parkum’s broader body of work, where figures frequently bear the marks of trauma, witness, and survival, Mirror Mirror reads as an introspective pause. Rather than depicting external violence, the painting examines the quieter dislocations of identity: the erosion of certainty, the vulnerability of self-perception, and the strange distance one can feel from one’s own image.
The facelessness is not emptiness but possibility. By refusing to define the features, Parkum invites viewers to project, confront, or recognize themselves within the form. The painting becomes less a portrait and more an encounter — with the instability of selfhood, the pressure of being seen, and the uneasy truth that reflection does not always return a coherent face.
In Mirror Mirror, Parkum suggests that self-knowledge is not a fixed image but a process — one shaped by memory, perception, and emotional weather. The mirror does not confirm identity; it questions it. And in that questioning, the work locates a fragile but honest form of presence.
-Jonathan Flike
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- Dimensions
- 24ʺW × 1ʺD × 36ʺH
- Frame Type
- Unframed
- Period
- 1980s
- Country of Origin
- United States
- Item Type
- Vintage, Antique or Pre-owned
- Materials
- Acrylic Paint
- Condition
- Good Condition, Original Condition Unaltered, Some Imperfections
- Color
- Red
- Condition Notes
- Please note that this item is vintage and shows wear consistent with age, use, and history. Signs of wear may … morePlease note that this item is vintage and shows wear consistent with age, use, and history. Signs of wear may include, but are not limited to, minor surface marks, patina, fading, or imperfections typical of older items. All items are sold as-is, which is standard with vintage and pre-owned goods and cannot be returned on the basis of condition. Measurements are approximate. We do our best to describe items accurately; however, condition assessments are subjective. If you would like additional details, images, or clarification before purchasing, please contact us. less
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