Wallpaper
“Wallpaper” I see as both a cultural and social anthropological comment about ‘us’ and the world we live in. “Wallpaper” aims to challenge and question our very existence and purpose for living. I see the wallpaper a visual metaphor of our day to day life – repetitive, ordinary, endless, on going, twee. The size of the wall is all important, drawing attention to the scale of the situation – and then there is of course the flat screen TV. The object that is always switched on, the source of all information, the ‘thing’ that is suppose to ‘take us out’ of this humdrum existence but in fact throws us right back into the same world, showing us a fragment of that world we occupy, re-enforcing what we already know - the electronic - across all generations - comfort blanket.
Eric Snell, March 2009
Wallpaper
French 17th century toile patterned wallpaper
One security camera and one flat-screen monitor
Museum London, 2009
Photo: John Tamblyn
Wallpaper
French 17th century toile patterned wallpaper
One security camera and one flat-screen monitor
Museum London, 2009
Photo: John Tamblyn
Wallpaper
French 17th century toile patterned wallpaper
Gold Frame, two candle holders and two candles
London Museum, 2009
Photo: John Tamblyn
Wallpaper
French 17th century toile patterned wallpaper
Gold Frame, two candle holders and two candles
London Museum, 2009
Photo: John Tamblyn