Mark Sheeky
Imagining Happiness, 2014
oil on canvas
24 x 34 in
61 x 86.4 cm
61 x 86.4 cm
Copyright © Mark Sheeky
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Imagining Happiness explores themes of emotional confinement, resilience, and the enduring possibility of hope.
Inspired by a visit to Manchester Art Gallery and a renewed encounter with Auguste Charles Mengin’s atmospheric painting "Sappho", Imagining Happiness explores themes of emotional confinement, resilience, and the enduring possibility of hope. Drawing upon the melancholic romanticism of Mengin’s composition, the painting transforms these influences into a deeply symbolic contemporary landscape.
Dominated by a vast grey seascape and rugged ochre rock formations, the composition evokes a sense of isolation and emotional weight. Emerging from this stark environment is a monumental rock figure whose presence feels both imposing and vulnerable. Within the figure’s head, an opening of clear blue sky appears as a quiet but powerful suggestion of freedom, escape, and the persistence of optimism amid despair.
The emotional tension of the work is heightened through the introduction of vivid red elements within the otherwise muted palette. A solitary tree standing atop the whale like monolith suggests endurance against the storm, while the remnants of a red balloon introduce a more poignant symbolism. Associated with childhood innocence, joy, and fleeting freedom, the balloon appears ruptured and carried away by the wind, hinting at loss and the fragility of happiness.
Despite the turbulence of the surrounding landscape, the painting ultimately gestures toward hope. The fragment of blue sky remains constant, serving as a reminder that calm, light, and possibility continue to exist beyond the storm.
Dominated by a vast grey seascape and rugged ochre rock formations, the composition evokes a sense of isolation and emotional weight. Emerging from this stark environment is a monumental rock figure whose presence feels both imposing and vulnerable. Within the figure’s head, an opening of clear blue sky appears as a quiet but powerful suggestion of freedom, escape, and the persistence of optimism amid despair.
The emotional tension of the work is heightened through the introduction of vivid red elements within the otherwise muted palette. A solitary tree standing atop the whale like monolith suggests endurance against the storm, while the remnants of a red balloon introduce a more poignant symbolism. Associated with childhood innocence, joy, and fleeting freedom, the balloon appears ruptured and carried away by the wind, hinting at loss and the fragility of happiness.
Despite the turbulence of the surrounding landscape, the painting ultimately gestures toward hope. The fragment of blue sky remains constant, serving as a reminder that calm, light, and possibility continue to exist beyond the storm.
Framed size: 66 x 92 cm / 26 x 36 ¼ in
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