‘Fluttering Dreams’ by Caitlin Hackett

Artist: Caitlin Hackett
Title: ‘Fluttering Dreams’
Medium: Watercolour, acrylic, and ink on cold press watercolour paper
Dimensions: 11″ x 9.25″ Oval
Framing: Framed (frame size: 17″ x 12.5″)
Year of Creation: 2021

NOTE: This piece was available to purchase as part of our ‘Labyrinth of Dreams’ show, which ran between 3rd – 24th December 2021. If you would like to inquire about its current availability, please email sales@wowxwow.com and we will be delighted to assist.

Description

‘Fluttering Dreams’ by Caitlin Hackett

Artist: Caitlin Hackett
Title: ‘Fluttering Dreams’
Medium: Watercolour, acrylic, and ink on cold press watercolour paper
Dimensions: 11″ x 9.25″ Oval
Framing: Framed (frame size: 17″ x 12.5″)
Year of Creation: 2021

About the Artwork:

“FLUTTERING DREAMS was inspired by my own dreams; I often have vivid lucid dreams that I recall upon waking up, and they end up inspiring my paintings and creative thought process. However my memory of these dreams can be fragile and transient, they tend to drift away from me piece by piece, or to become faded as the day stretches out and the night fades away. This painting is meant to capture that feeling of trying to hold onto a dream like a precious trinket under glass, and how it cracks and drifts away.” – Caitlin Hackett

About the Artist:

(Artist Bio)

Caitlin Hackett’s passion for the natural world has inspired her art since she first put pencil to paper as child. Hackett grew up on the northern coast of California, between the cold Pacific ocean and the redwood forests. It was there that her love for nature and wilderness flourished. As she has grown Caitlin has combined her love for animals with an interest in both wildlife biology and mythology, to create artwork that speaks to the current biological mythos that constructs the barrier between what is considered ‘human’, and what is considered ‘animal’.

Mirroring ancient myths of transformation, often in grotesque ways, we find in contemporary times that animals are being transformed biologically due to interactions with human pollutants; there are frogs with triplicate legs and blind eyes, cows with shriveled sets of legs growing out of their backs, two faced piglets being born on factory farms and radioactive fish rotting from the inside in poisoned seas, the list goes on. Caitlin Hackett is interested in the power of these mutations, both for their mythological allusions as well as their dire environmental implications. Her hope is to remind those who view her artwork that we too are animals, embedded in this fragile world even as we poison it.

Hackett’s art alludes to the boundaries that separate humans from animals, both physically and metaphysically, and the way in which these boundaries are warped by science, mythology and religion alike. Like the gods of so many myths, humanity has warped the world into our own image, and it is this often frightening image that Caitlin hopes to reflect in her work.