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Artwork Description REYNOLDA In REYNOLDA, Virginia Cohn Parkum presents a small gathering of seated figures whose pale, almost skeletal bodies emerge from a field of saturated color. Rendered with loose, searching lines and chalk-like passages of pigment, the figures appear less as individuals than as presences—fragile embodiments suspended between material form and memory. Their torsos tilt forward, their limbs simplified into gestural contours, and their faces remain indistinct, suggesting interiority rather than portraiture. The composition is structured by bold blocks of color: a luminous red field presses forward from the background, while vivid greens and yellows animate the ground plane beneath the figures. These chromatic zones do not describe space naturalistically; instead, they generate emotional pressure and visual rhythm. The red backdrop evokes intensity and immediacy, while the greens suggest vitality and renewal, producing a tension between warmth and organic growth. The figures sit on a row of simplified chairs, their placement suggesting communal proximity yet emotional distance. They are aligned but not interacting, sharing space without sharing narrative. Parkum’s handling of the bodies—softly erased in places, reinforced in others—creates a sensation of impermanence, as if the figures are being remembered rather than observed. The title REYNOLDA anchors the scene in a specific cultural or geographic reference, possibly evoking Reynolda House and its historic landscape, yet the painting resists literal interpretation. Instead, the setting becomes a psychological site: a space where memory, gathering, and quiet human presence converge. The work may be understood as an homage not to a location itself, but to the act of congregating within spaces shaped by history. Parkum’s layered surfaces and powdery textures emphasize process and touch, allowing pigment to sit visibly atop the paper while areas of raw ground remain exposed. This interplay reinforces the painting’s sense of transience and lived experience. In REYNOLDA, Parkum captures the stillness of shared presence—figures bound together by place, color, and atmosphere, yet suspended in their own interior worlds. The work invites contemplation of memory, community, and the quiet weight carried within collective spaces. |
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Vintage Condition Disclaimer Special Condition Notes N/A |
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Provenance* 1996-2025: Virginia Cohn Parkum 2025-2026: Cordier Auctions 2026-Present: Visard Gallery *Provenance and attribution details are based on our best research and are offered in good faith but are not guaranteed. Please contact us through the contact form with any questions prior to purchase. |
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REYNOLDA - Virginia Cohn Parkum, c. 1996
$450.00
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