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Jonathan Viner USA, 1976
Framed size: 95 x 95 cm, 37.4 x 37.4 in
Further images
Jonathan Viner’s The Princess reimagines traditional portraiture by blending classical refinement with contemporary symbolism. The painting captures a serene young woman wearing an elegant white dress, luminous in the delicate glow of evening light. Yet, this tranquility is deliberately unsettled by the playful yet enigmatic elements that populate her surroundings.
The soft forms of the Squishmallows serve as emblems of youthful innocence, their wide-eyed gazes evoking both curiosity and a childlike wonder. However, their arrangement, almost like an attentive audience, adds a subtle theatricality to the scene, as if they bear witness to an unfolding drama just beyond the viewer’s grasp.
Central to this drama is the knife, incongruously and provocatively lodged into the surface of the furniture. This singular act of intrusion fractures the otherwise harmonious composition, introducing a sense of unease to the cinematic narrative of the painting. Hidden in plain sight beneath the watchful gaze of the Squishmallows, the knife transforms the scene, inviting viewers to unravel its meaning and contemplate the story it suggests.