Slide Images
1 - Notations pg. 554, 2005
Earth, oil, on mylar
43 cm x 35.5 cm
17 in x 14 in
2 - Notations pg. 378, 2000
Earth, oil, on mylar
43 cm x 35.5 cm
17 in x 14 in
3 - Notations pg. 313, 1999
Earth, oil, on mylar
43 cm x 35.5 cm
17 in x 14 in
4 - Notations pg 164, 1997
Earth, oil, graphite on mylar
43 cm x 35.5 cm
17 in x 14 in
5 - Notations pg. 435, 2005
Earth, oil, on mylar
43 cm x 35.5 cm
17 in x 14 in
6 - Notations pg. 277, 2005
Earth, oil, on mylar
43 cm x 35.5 cm
17 in x 14 in
7 - Notations pg 178, 1997
Earth, oil on mylar
43 cm x 35.5 cm
17 in x 14 in
8 - Notations pg 361, 2001
Earth, oil on mylar
43 cm x 35.5 cm
17 in x 14 in
9 - Notations pg 431, 2005
Earth, oil on mylar
43 cm x 35.5 cm
17 in x 14 in
10 - Notations pg 123, 1997
Earth, oil, graphite on mylar
43 cm x 35.5 cm
17 in x 14 in
11 - Notations pg 192, 1997
Earth, oil, graphite on mylar
43 cm x 35.5 cm
17 in x 14 in
12 - Notations pg 290, 1999
Earth, oil, organic material on mylar
43 cm x 35.5 cm
17 in x 14 in
13 - Notations pg 299, 1999
Earth, oil, graphite on mylar
43 cm x 35.5 cm
17 in x 14 in
14 - Notations pg 390, 2002
Earth, oil, graphite on mylar
43 cm x 35.5 cm
17 in x 14 in
15 - Notations pg 403, 2003
Earth, oil, steel wool, graphite on mylar
43 cm x 35.5 cm
17 in x 14 in
Notations (Earth Marks) Series
The body is the most personal place that I can express from. Our gestures in the present connect us to the past and to the future. They are our lifelines. Each gesture creates a state of mind - a slight movement of the head, shoulder or any part of the body immediately changes our intention. Within seconds, the gestures we make disappear an evaporate. Movement is life; life is movement.
A stain on a wall inspired the Earth Marks series. Each time I looked at the stain, I was taken by how much it resembled a figure. I started playing around with the idea of how much or how little was necessary to convey a figure in painting and drawing. I became intrigued that the slightest smudge would transform and reshape the gesture of the figure.
I have a collection of over 500 earth samples that I have gathered in my travels. It was by accident that I discovered that by using pigment from earth and mixing it with oil, I could make paint. While I became immediately engaged in the rich possibilities of the material, I also felt that the material was a metaphor for transformation. In this extensive ongoing series, I explore the aspect of transformation, as well the gestures and movements of the body. I also started to investigate all kinds of scales; sometimes the figure was alone and at other times in groups. I titled these works Earth Marks, Notes from my Journal. Notations and Heads.
“Earth itself acts as a constitutive medium in Safdie’s series of drawings variously titled Earth Notes, Earth Marks and Notations. These figurations, executed on mylar in earth pigments and oil, engage with the human form both singly and in groups. By their ambiguous scale, their smudged contours and their haunting, nomadic quality, they suggest a meandering, even labyrinthine search for nature in the self.”(1)
“While these works “draw from the human figure"[…] they seem to derive their impetus from within, as if driven by their own will. In this body of work Safdie employs a simple yet vital and expressive technique: as her material she has mixed linseed oil and samples of earth which she has collected from places during her travels. The material is used both in reality and as a metaphor for transformation.” (2)
(1) Zanatovska Murray, Irena,“Sylvia Safdie The Inventory of Invention”, pg. 24 (English), pg. 40 (French), 2004.
(2) Daskalova, Rossitza. “Mindful Movement”, C issue #66, Summer 2000, p.107.