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Study Of A Broken Glass Vase (2005) Painting by Wilf Tilley

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Seller Wilf Tilley

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  1221 px  

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  • Pencil on Linen Canvas
  • Dimensions Height 10.8in, Width 8.7in
  • Artwork's condition The artwork is in very good condition
  • Framing This artwork is not framed
  • Categories Everyday Life
Study of a small, bowl-shaped vase made of purple glass. The bowl is illuminated to cast a "transparent" shadow and expose the cracked surface of the breakage to the neck and upper part of the bowl. Executed on linen-grained, oil painting paper in ink, and oil with gesso ground, laid down on wood . The date is tentative. Possibly made around the [...]
Study of a small, bowl-shaped vase made of purple glass. The bowl is illuminated to cast a "transparent" shadow and expose the cracked surface of the breakage to the neck and upper part of the bowl. Executed on linen-grained, oil painting paper in ink, and oil with gesso ground, laid down on wood . The date is tentative. Possibly made around the time of the broken wine glass painting entitled, "The Wrong Person", also published on this website. There is a catalogue number in pencil, recto, lower right. The work is also signed with the same catalogue number (EXA 797) in ink verso.

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A Broken Glass Vase

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Wilf Tilley (Prof. Michael Miller) was born in the North of England and began his career as an actor, age 16, with the National Youth Theater at The Old Vic. in a production of Antony and Cleopatra, in which Helen [...]

Wilf Tilley (Prof. Michael Miller) was born in the North of England and began his career as an actor, age 16, with the National Youth Theater at The Old Vic. in a production of Antony and Cleopatra, in which Helen Mirren played Cleopatra and he carried a spear.  “Wilf Tilley” (a combination of parental names) was part-adopted for a first solo exhibition at the AIR Gallery, London, when he was 27. He studied English and European Literature with Italian before a postgraduate degree at the Royal College of Art, and co-organized fundraising exhibitions for the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament and the anti-apartheid movement: the latter at the Royal Academy of Arts, London. An interest in the neuro-anatomical drawings of Leonardo da Vinci led, via the Open University, to research on neuronal modelling in the Department of Physiology, Anatomy and Genetics in the University of Oxford. He was a Fellow of St. Catherine's College, Oxford, and after a two-year Fellowship in the International Center for Medical Research, Kobe, was a founder member, then senior adviser at the RIKEN Brain Science Institute. While at the institute he designed and supervised installation of a brain science exploratorium: "BrainBox". Wilf has held eight solo exhibitions, participated in group exhibitions internationally, and held a first retrospective in Japan, “The Neuro-mytheologian And Other Works", in 2003.  A second retrospective was held at the Frederick Harris Gallery, Tokyo in 2017. And a recent portrait, "Manami-san (2023)", was chosen for the New Light Art Prize Exhibition in the UK, and toured five galleries nationally (2023-2024). As the co-author of several neurological case studies, Wilf addressed a conference in Japan in 2017 on mental time as a neuroscientific phenomenon, using the techniques of classical rhetoric – as described in the Ad Herrenium – to elucidate episodic memory. He is now working on a series, A story in silico, connected with personal memory, nostalgia and fabulation, and recently published two short stories about the art world in the Ekphrastic Review (2022 and 2023).

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Printmaking titled "Boule de Suif #1" by Wilf Tilley, Original Artwork, Digital Print
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Printmaking titled "The Lotus Eater: a…" by Wilf Tilley, Original Artwork, Digital Print
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Drawing titled "Ninety-nine Minutes…" by Wilf Tilley, Original Artwork, Graphite
Graphite on Paper | 13.2x9.7 in
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