Artwork

Catacombs

Artwork

Catacombs

Artwork

Catacombs

Artwork

Catacombs

Inspired by the insane catacombs under the streets of Paris, these sculptures were shown at Salt Gallery in Philadelphia and the Re-Institute in Millerton, NY. I visited the catacombs first as a teenager — a year or two after my mom died — and was pretty much dumbstruck by the love and humor and maybe horror, too, that was communicated through the bones.

Silkscreen of a photorealistic depiction of a human bone in transparent multiples overlaid atop one another.
Bone Pile, 2013, ink and stamps on mulberry paper, 20x28 inches
Silkscreen of a photorealistic depiction of a human bone in transparent multiples overlaid atop one another.
Bone Pile, 2013, ink and stamps on mulberry paper, 20x28 inches
Eve-Biddle-Artworks-Catacombs-2010-03
Catacombs, 2010, ceramic and gold leaf, each bone: 1x1,4 inches
Eve-Biddle-Artworks-Catacombs-2010-01
Catacombs, 2010, ceramic, each bone: 1x1,4 inches
Eve-Biddle-Artworks-Catacombs-2010-02
Catacombs, 2010, ceramic and gold leaf, each bone: 1x1,4 inches
A piece of art featuring small white objects closed on one end and opened on the other, separated into two piles of roughly 20 objects each. One pile shows the objects open end up and the other pile shows them open end down.
Model for Collective Memory, 2010, ceramic, glaze and gold leaf, 2x2x4 inches each (collaborative with Bowie Zunino)
Photograph of molds of several human bones on a surface, arrayed wing-like from a central point representing a spine.
Encasement, 2010, ceramic and bluestone, 20x18x2 inches

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Big Cats and Security Cameras

Image depicts a person leaning over a stroller to care for a baby.
Silkscreen of a single heron's wing in purple and pink shades.

© Eve Biddle 2019