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Artworks
Elaine Woo MacGregor
Silk Roads Aurora, 2025Acrylic on linenUnframed: 80 x 60 x 2 cmOwn Art
As low as 10 interest-free monthly payments of £250 and £250.00 deposit.This work is available to view online or by request. This is an unframed canvas which can be hung directly on the wall. Changing Ideas Award This painting - 'Silk...This work is available to view online or by request.
This is an unframed canvas which can be hung directly on the wall.
Changing Ideas Award
This painting - "Silk Roads Aurora", from the "Daughters of the Silk Roads" series, addresses the social issue of gender inequality and the erasure of female agency within historical and cultural narratives. Traditionally, women along the Silk Roads have been depicted as passive figures or decorative motifs. My work seeks to dismantle these stereotypes by presenting women not as subjects to be viewed, but as active "navigators" and "entrepreneurs" of their own destinies.
The series was born from research supported by the 2023 RSA Blackadder Houston Award, which allowed me to witness the rapid urbanization of the Silk Road’s modern hubs. By synthesizing ancient motifs with a "Cyberpunk" aesthetic—influenced by the neon luminosity of contemporary Shanghai—I highlight the tension between heritage and progress. This artistic choice serves as a visual metaphor for the climate of rapid change and the social displacement that often follows.
Furthermore, the work advocates for a global duty of care toward our vanishing cultural memories. In an era of globalization, the "Daughters" represent a reclamation of identity for the diaspora, bridging the gap between traditional roots and a hyper-modern future. Through the fluid, performative marks of "Grass Writing" calligraphy, I invite the viewer to reconsider our shared responsibility in preserving human rights and cultural history.
By placing women at the center of these shifting landscapes, the work challenges the viewer to recognize the ongoing struggle for visibility and autonomy. It is an exploration of the past as a tool for social empowerment in the present. - the artist
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