Everyday Saint
Pencil on paper
Private Collection
EVERYDAY SAINTS
Selected Works on Paper
Everyday Saints is a series of portraits drawn from encounters with people whose presence might otherwise pass unnoticed. Rendered in red pencil, the figures occupy the space of devotional images while remaining unmistakably contemporary, vulnerable, and individual
Everyday Saint
Pencil on paper
Artist’s Collection
Everyday Saint
Pencil on paper
Private Collection
Everyday Saint
Pencil on paper
Available upon inquiry
Everyday Saint
Pencil on paper
Artist’s Collection
"Everyday Saints"
511 Gallery May 24 - June 30, 2005
Viviane Silvera’s large-scale drawings are inspired by historical devotional images, which she combines with modern subjects to interrogate the significance of poses and people. In her drawings, Silvera brings to the surface the fundamental issue of how humans view and decide on what is sacred in art imagery. In Renaissance art, for example, was it the identity of the figure that evoked reverence and even adoration, or was it rather the artist’s ability to choose and represent a figurative stance or position that made the subject seem important and inspirational? Silvera poses the problem but leaves the viewer to induce an answer.
Silvera taps into the beauty of everyday people by capturing them in those moments in which they exhibit qualities of transcendence: thoughtfulness, reflection, pure emotion or contemplation. She highlights the beauty of the human form as well as its expression and gesture, and thus transforms her subjects into figures who transcend the merely human and approach the ineffable. Her people become iconic, and their clothing and features echo those of historical icons in unexpected ways: a young woman’s hooded sweatshirt, for example, makes us think of the hoods of monks.
Everyday Saints manages to relate iconic figures and gestures to present-day imagery seamlessly. These drawings pose intelligent questions in a stunning manner. Silvera’s brilliant pencil fills each page with intensely cross-hatched red lines—a graphic way of competing with the photograph’s capacity for detail. Captivating to both the eye and the mind, these works stay in our memories long after we have stopped viewing them.