Details
Description
Shadow
Virginia Cohn Parkum, c. Unknown
In Shadow, Virginia Cohn Parkum departs from the airy immediacy of her sumi ink …
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Shadow
Virginia Cohn Parkum, c. Unknown
In Shadow, Virginia Cohn Parkum departs from the airy immediacy of her sumi ink works and enters a denser, more introspective terrain. The composition is built through layered, nearly monochromatic blacks and charcoals, applied with a tactile, sculptural thickness that gives the surface a palpable weight. Rather than depicting shadow as absence, Parkum treats it as substance — something that accumulates, veils, and slowly reveals.
Beneath the darkened surface, a human visage emerges in fragments. The contour of a face becomes perceptible through subtle shifts in sheen and relief: a brow ridge, the slope of a nose, the curve of lips, and the suggestion of an eye partially obscured. These features are not drawn but excavated, as if the face exists within the darkness and is only momentarily exposed by reflected light. The glossy passages catch illumination unevenly, creating a haunting interplay between concealment and revelation.
The heavily worked surface bears ridges, smears, and scraped textures that evoke erosion, memory, and the passage of time. These tactile interruptions disrupt any sense of smooth representation, reinforcing the idea that identity and presence are layered, fragile, and subject to obscuration. Small glints of reflected light punctuate the darkness like fleeting moments of awareness.
Emotionally, the work carries a quiet gravity. The face appears introspective, inwardly turned, suspended between emergence and dissolution. Rather than presenting a portrait, Parkum offers an encounter with the psychological space of shadow — a realm where memory, selfhood, and perception merge.
Shadow becomes less an image to observe and more a presence to experience. Through density, texture, and near-total tonal restraint, Parkum transforms darkness into a reflective field, inviting viewers to confront the subtle boundary between what is seen, what is hidden, and what persists beneath the surface.
-Jonathan Flike
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- Dimensions
- 16ʺW × 1ʺD × 20ʺH
- Frame Type
- Unframed
- Period
- 1990s
- Country of Origin
- United States
- Item Type
- Vintage, Antique or Pre-owned
- Materials
- Acrylic Paint
- Condition
- Good Condition, Original Condition Unaltered, Some Imperfections
- Color
- Black
- Condition Notes
- Shadow Virginia Cohn Parkum, c. Unknown In Shadow, Virginia Cohn Parkum departs from the airy immediacy of her sumi ink … moreShadow Virginia Cohn Parkum, c. Unknown In Shadow, Virginia Cohn Parkum departs from the airy immediacy of her sumi ink works and enters a denser, more introspective terrain. The composition is built through layered, nearly monochromatic blacks and charcoals, applied with a tactile, sculptural thickness that gives the surface a palpable weight. Rather than depicting shadow as absence, Parkum treats it as substance — something that accumulates, veils, and slowly reveals. Beneath the darkened surface, a human visage emerges in fragments. The contour of a face becomes perceptible through subtle shifts in sheen and relief: a brow ridge, the slope of a nose, the curve of lips, and the suggestion of an eye partially obscured. These features are not drawn but excavated, as if the face exists within the darkness and is only momentarily exposed by reflected light. The glossy passages catch illumination unevenly, creating a haunting interplay between concealment and revelation. The heavily worked surface bears ridges, smears, and scraped textures that evoke erosion, memory, and the passage of time. These tactile interruptions disrupt any sense of smooth representation, reinforcing the idea that identity and presence are layered, fragile, and subject to obscuration. Small glints of reflected light punctuate the darkness like fleeting moments of awareness. Emotionally, the work carries a quiet gravity. The face appears introspective, inwardly turned, suspended between emergence and dissolution. Rather than presenting a portrait, Parkum offers an encounter with the psychological space of shadow — a realm where memory, selfhood, and perception merge. Shadow becomes less an image to observe and more a presence to experience. Through density, texture, and near-total tonal restraint, Parkum transforms darkness into a reflective field, inviting viewers to confront the subtle boundary between what is seen, what is hidden, and what persists beneath the surface. -Jonathan Flike less
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