Cassandra Eight
Susan Banks
- Painting
- Spiritual & Philosophical
- Personal Narratives & Identity
- Abstract & Conceptual
- Greek Mythology
- Purple
- Playful
- Reworking
- Priestess
Dimensions
60 x 60 x 1.7
Cassandra Eight reimagines and reworks a motif that represents the princess/priestess/clairvoyant Cassandra. The painting suggests both her temple in Troy but also the threshold in Mycenae that led to her fate. The work is playful, intentionally painterly and untidy suggesting old, unstable surfaces and images pilfered from ceramics, exaggerating the insecurity of the wobbly columns depicted in pottery decoration but also emphasising the threshold and liminal space.
Note. Cassandra, a daughter of King Priam, was the prophetess who foretold the fall of Troy. She was given the gift of prophecy by Apollo but, as she rejected him, he cursed her so that nobody would believe her.
After the fall of Troy, she was taken as a concubine by Agamemnon and, with him, she was killed by his wife, Clytemnestra.
Oil on canvas
Susan Banks