Eldon Richardson's 3D Art Galleries on Galerra
Eldon Richardson has 1 public gallery with 1 total views on Galerra.
Galleries by Eldon Richardson
- Mirror Image — Mirror Image: The Flawed Symmetry of Duality "There's no symmetry in nature," the Impressionist painter Édouard Manet once observed. "One eye is never exactly the same as the other. There's always a difference." In art history, symmetry is traditionally used to show balance, order, and harmony. However, as Manet implies, perfection is a myth. This exhibition, Mirror Image, brings together five seminal works that use symmetrical frameworks not to celebrate order, but to expose human fracturing. By implementing mirrored compositions, these artists explore duality, parallel histories, and divergent identities. They demonstrate that within every mirrored artwork, a deliberate flaw or shift exists, a tense space that forces the viewer to introspect on trauma, systemic bias, and loss. The exhibition opens with Deborah Roberts’ diptych, Tomorrow, Tomorrow and Tomorrow (2023), which introduces the theme through a sharp socio-political critique. Roberts presents a mirrored repetition of a Black boy against contrasting white and black backgrounds. The parallel imagery creates an immediate visual balance, yet the sudden shift in his posture, from curious innocence to fearful recoil, shatters any sense of peace. This divergence creates an intense emotional tension, revealing how systemic bias transforms an innocent child into a perceived threat. Moving from the societal gaze to familial conformity, the exhibition transitions to Zhang Xiaogang’s Bloodline Series: The Big Family No. 2 (1995). Utilizing a rigid, symmetrical composition that mimics traditional Chinese studio photography, Xiaogang explores the erasure of individuality under political pressure. The parents and child sit in an unsettling stillness, their expressions flattened. However, the symmetry is disrupted by a vibrant yellow complexion on the child and faint, wandering red lines. These flawed elements expose the friction between state-mandated collectivism and private memory. The exhibition then shifts focus from political systems to the intimate tragedy of mortality with Felix Gonzalez-Torres’ Untitled (Perfect Lovers) (1991). This conceptual masterpiece relies entirely on mechanical symmetry, featuring two identical analog clocks ticking side-by-side. Initially synchronized, this perfect balance represents the equality of a partnership. Yet, the inevitable flaw is built into the machines themselves: as batteries fade, one clock will inevitably slow down and stop before the other. The breaking of this mechanical parallel beautifully captures the profound grief of loss. This profound internal grief expands into a visceral crisis of identity in Frida Kahlo’s The Two Fridas (1939). Kahlo anchors her self-portrait with a symmetrical balance, seating two versions of herself hand-in-hand. The structural harmony, however, masks a chaotic emotional reality. The divergent styling, in a European gown, the other in traditional Mexican attire, symbolizes a deeply fractured identity following her divorce. The symmetry ensures they remain bound to the same exposed, bleeding heart, emphasizing that she cannot separate these warring halves of her heritage. The journey concludes with Arshile Gorky’s The Artist and His Mother (c. 1926–1936), an artwork that serves as the ultimate culmination of memory and loss. Gorky uses a flat, photographic symmetry to freeze a final moment with his mother before her death during the Armenian Genocide. The deliberate flaw here is the erasing of the mother's hands into a white void of paint. This imperfection marks the tragic failure to fully reconstruct the dead, leaving the viewer to introspect on the ghostly nature of trauma. Together, these five masterpieces reveal that within the mirror of art, it is the imperfections that reflect our deepest truths. (1 views)

