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This painting was made for an exhibition called
“Man for Man”, in which a number of male artists commented
on the male image and the concept of ‘image-building’.
The works were shown in upmarket menswear stores in Amsterdam, stores
themselves bastions of ‘the male image’.
In a style, reminding of social-realist and early impressionist
painting, a coloured parking-attendant is painted, posing next to
an expensive car, he just clamped. The man is a modern hunter next
to some freshly caught game. He is an image-wrecker, rather than
an image-builder.
His uniform gives him the power to reduce powerful and successful
men to puffing, screaming heaps of helplessness, full of hate and
frustration. The attendant himself quietly smiles and looks confidently
at the viewer.
He knows he’s right.
He wears his gold chain and gold watch and holds his walkie-talkie
and ticket-book. Only the epaulettes on his shirt, distinguish him
from the cell-phone and pfilofax holding owner of the car.
These are people we love to hate. But don’t forget, he could
be our son…
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