Deconstructed Vanitas

I’ve been working with still life my entire creative life. It’s a genre I know intimately not just technically, but historically and symbolically. Of all its forms, vanitas holds particular weight: a genre of allegorical still lifes rooted in 16th- and 17th-century Europe, vanitas uses transitory objects extinguished candles, fading flowers, rotting fruit to remind us of mortality, the futility of pleasure, and the vanity of worldly pursuits. I wanted to look at this tradition through a contemporary lens and also think about how we remember, collect, and aestheticize impermanence. I kept the genre’s most recognizable motif the skull but instead of recreating a classical arrangement I rebuilt it as a counterform: my skull is filled with tiny objects.These objects echo the genre’s symbolic vocabulary dead insects, tableware,gems, dried petals, seashells. But they are playful, brightly lit, materially eclectic. I like to think of it as a kind of two‑step fractal: a vanitas inside a vanitas. It doesn’t spiral into infinity just folds in once, like the genre giving itself a wink. There’s solemnity in the symbolism, but also humor a knowing, slightly absurd approach to the aesthetics of death and decay.

Details

  • FramingUnframed
  • SignatureHand-signed by Artist
  • Visual QualitiesDark Colors
  • Edition type Open Edition

Name Of Artist (So You Are Searchable!)

Dina Belenko

Medium

  • Photography

Exact Dimensions

24 x 18 in

Year Created

2025

Materials

High quality poster print

Subject Matter

  • Everyday Objects
  • Figure
  • Flora

Mediums & Techniques (Photos)

  • Black-and-White
  • Color Photography
  • Multiple Exposure
  • Manipulated Photography
  • Staged
  • Snapshot Photography
  • Vintage Style
  • Close-Up

Reviews (0)

$300.00