Self-Portrait in Motion, circa 1940

Esther Carp

Available
73 x 60 cm Oil on canvas
The work created by Esther Carp presents a self-portrait constructed in a dynamic of movement, through a pictorial language inherited from Cubism and the avant-gardes of the early 20th century. The face appears multiplied and partially superimposed, suggesting a succession of viewpoints that conveys an unstable and shifting perception of the figure. The artist does not seek here to faithfully represent her features but to transcribe a presence in permanent transformation.

The composition is organized around a dense network of curved, broken, and angular lines that structure the body and face into a multitude of interlocking fragments. The different parts of the figure seem to cross, overlap, and sometimes merge, creating an effect of continuous circulation across the entire pictorial surface. The very marked black contours compartmentalize the composition into autonomous colored zones, while the colored lines freely traverse the canvas and accentuate the sensation of rhythm and displacement.

The space appears deliberately flattened and is constructed by juxtaposition of geometric forms, without a clear separation between the background and the figure. This fusion between the environment and the character gives the impression that the body dissolves into the surrounding space. The secondary faces visible in the background also participate in this impression of multiplicity and can be interpreted as successive projections of the artist herself.

The chromatic palette is particularly vivid and contrasting, mixing reds, yellows, greens, blues, and violets in a highly saturated composition. The colors do not follow a naturalistic logic but primarily contribute to the expressive intensity of the work. The oppositions between warm and cool tones strongly energize the surface and reinforce the visual tension of the composition.
The light seems artificial and fragmented, distributed in colored touches rather than through traditional modeling. The pictorial material, applied in flat areas and traversed by nervous lines, gives the whole a great visual intensity.

Finally, this work testifies to a post-Cubist approach nourished by the experiments of the Parisian avant-gardes, notably those of Pablo Picasso or even Francis Picabia. However, Esther Carp develops here a more expressive and instinctive personal style, in which the fragmentation of the portrait becomes the means to translate a multiple, shifting, and deeply inner identity.
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