"Flagland" - Open Edition Art Print
C-Print | Open Edition | 11” x 14”
A section of a house left standing precariously and impossibly on a thin pole. Is it a flag, is it a home? Does it represent both? How many more homes need to be uprooted to plant new flags? And who owns the land the flags and homes are on? How many empires have controlled it in the past, how many flags have flown before it? I cannot help but think, how the land must feel so very wounded from all the jabs and pricks of the flagpoles. The title “Flagland” attempts to make the viewer question the idea of flags and home in general, not to mention the cost of human lives and resources that goes into planting one flag and uprooting another. This artwork was made three month prior to October 7th, 2023.
100% proceeds donated to the Kajaba Family.
C-Print | Open Edition | 11” x 14”
A section of a house left standing precariously and impossibly on a thin pole. Is it a flag, is it a home? Does it represent both? How many more homes need to be uprooted to plant new flags? And who owns the land the flags and homes are on? How many empires have controlled it in the past, how many flags have flown before it? I cannot help but think, how the land must feel so very wounded from all the jabs and pricks of the flagpoles. The title “Flagland” attempts to make the viewer question the idea of flags and home in general, not to mention the cost of human lives and resources that goes into planting one flag and uprooting another. This artwork was made three month prior to October 7th, 2023.
100% proceeds donated to the Kajaba Family.
C-Print | Open Edition | 11” x 14”
A section of a house left standing precariously and impossibly on a thin pole. Is it a flag, is it a home? Does it represent both? How many more homes need to be uprooted to plant new flags? And who owns the land the flags and homes are on? How many empires have controlled it in the past, how many flags have flown before it? I cannot help but think, how the land must feel so very wounded from all the jabs and pricks of the flagpoles. The title “Flagland” attempts to make the viewer question the idea of flags and home in general, not to mention the cost of human lives and resources that goes into planting one flag and uprooting another. This artwork was made three month prior to October 7th, 2023.
100% proceeds donated to the Kajaba Family.