Oeuvre

Inside the canvas

Alongside her studio practice, Christine Comyn regularly works on projects, in dialogue with history, music, dance and performance.

The Myth of the Ultimate Creature

Or the myth of Plato, in which he sketches the ideal being, a being that carries both the masculine and the feminine within itself. This creature is complete, has no need to search for its other half and can thus direct all attention towards the spiritual.

The soft contours that her brushstroke knows so well, Christine carries into the creation of a figure that — in analogy with Plato — could be both masculine and feminine.
“THERE WERE HER ENCHANTING EYES,
SHINING BRIGHTER THAN THE STARS”

Figures

Silhouettes and portraits of anonymous young women appear in the painting with a naturalness as if it was always meant to be. Yet they serve merely as the bearer of a composition, in which foreground and background are equal and merge into a unity, in perfect harmony. The leading role is usually reserved for the eyes: they look at you, keep following you and bring the painting to life.

Female figures seem to emerge of their own accord, carried by layers of colour in which foreground and background converge. Their eyes remain, they meet your gaze and hold it.

Anonymous

No gaze, no face. Only hair, as a silent bearer of presence. The figure remains anonymous, and it is precisely in this that a tension arises: the urge to see, and the inability to do so.

The figure turns away. The face remains out of sight, while hair and form reveal just enough to keep looking. Between recognition and anonymity, a quiet tension arises.

Horae

Or the 24 hours of the day. From the radiant daylight through "l'heure bleue", the ultramarine sky just before darkness falls, to the warm artificial light of evening and night. And how these influence the appearance of people and things.

A play of light and time. Works that move through the hours of the day, with a focus on the blue tipping point before nightfall.

Reflections

Or in search of contemplation. Unsettling reflections of one and the same figure deepen the sense of introspection and stillness.

The same figure appears as an echo of itself.

Body language

"Movement cannot be painted. You can only suggest it." Intrinsic to movement is that it takes place in time and space; two concepts that a flat surface such as a canvas does not know. It is a challenge to depict something as fleeting as dance in an attempt to make the intangible tangible.

Movement escapes the canvas. What remains is a suggestion, a trace in colour and line. Between time and space, an image emerges of that which never stands still.

La douceur de l’ignorance

The life story of Marie-Antoinette, last queen of France, as inspiration and starting point. It is the story of an "ordinary" woman in an "extraordinary" situation. From cherished little princess to celebrated queen, from lovestruck teenager to desperate mother, tormented wife to despised and rejected queen. The life of Marie-Antoinette in all its facets, as a mirror for us, women of today.

A long-term project exploring the many facets of Marie-Antoinette: woman, mother, lover, icon. Exhibited among other places in Versailles, where Christine spent time to deepen the project.