Untitled

2014
Popova, Yelena
To the artist Yelena Popova invisibility is both a potent political issue and a formal device capable of capturing the attention of an audience exhausted by an image-saturated culture. Popova refers to the paintings in her ‘Evaporating’ series as ‘transparent images’ which ‘recede into the raw fabric’. These paintings – although they appear to look back at twentieth-century movements such as futurism and constructivism – are influenced by digital culture. Popova explains that ‘the disembodiment of screen-based images’ and certain touch-screen gestures is echoed in her painterly technique.
  • Artwork Details: 92 x 66cm
  • Edition:
  • Material description: Distemper or glue tempera on linen (Irish linen mixed with cotton)
  • Credit line: Arts Council Collection, Southbank Centre, London © the artist.
  • Theme: Abstract
  • Medium: Painting
  • Accession number: ACC8/2014

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The Arts Council Collection is the UK's most widely seen collection of modern and contemporary art.

With more than 8,000 works by over 2,000 artists, it can be seen in exhibitions and public displays across the country and beyond. This website offers unprecedented access to the Collection, and information about each work can be found on this site.