Francesco Clemente

Italian, born 1952

Son

© Francesco Clemente

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© Francesco Clemente

Image downloads are for educational use only. For all other purposes, please see our Obtaining and Using Images page.

Son, 1984

Artwork Details

Collection Highlight

Materials

oil on linen

Measurements

support: 112 x 91 inches (284.48 x 231.14 cm)

Collection Buffalo AKG Art Museum

Credit

George B. and Jenny R. Mathews Fund, 1985

Accession ID

1985:3

Francesco Clemente has described his paintings as “collected feelings” that act like a visual journal in which he depicts his innermost thoughts and dreams. During the 1970s, he began to explore a series of subjects that relate to the human form and psyche. These often incorporated non-Western symbols and mythology. While the painting’s imagery and title, as read aloud, may initially trigger thoughts of the Earth’s sun, the spelling of its title, S-O-N, implies a duality. In both Western and Eastern religion, the tree is a symbol of fertility and its various components—branches, leaves, and roots—are associated with creativity, knowledge, sexuality, and even death. Painted during a period of great transition, when Clemente was dividing his time between the United States and India, the tree may also serve as a surrogate self-portrait. His interest in the body, including his own, as an extension of nature traces back to Eastern philosophy, which Clemente describes as, “a metaphor of the world according to the rule that ‘as it is above, so it is below.’”

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