Lisa King: Seeding Solace, Nowness.com
Antonis Hadjimichael exposes the London-based print designer’s process, building abstract floral arrangements as a means of catharsis
Watch the film HERE.
With symbolic attachments as historic as the civilisations that first identified them, flowers hold meanings that surpass their ecological contexts: the dahlia’s fanned petals and connotations of inner strength, or the lotus – synonymous with fertility and rebirth. Each distinct variety carries its own subtext, communicated through the ways by which they are customarily exchanged and displayed.
For Bangkok-born print artist Lisa King, flowers lie at the heart of her process. Compiled in abstract compositions that later become her prints, her flowers are dissected stem to stigma, or with heads severed, as pools of ink diffuse in the water surrounding them. Arising in her practice as a cathartic response that pays tribute to her late mother, the floral arrangements upon which King’s design work is centered have become a symbol of solace – the act of laying and repeating patterns guiding her in processing her grief.
“Through repeating familiar rituals and deconstructing the act of arranging flowers I’ve found renewal, positivity, and healing at the hardest of times. No one has captured the essence of my process or inspiration quite the way Antonis has.”
Shot inside her East London studio, this meditative creative practice, and the emotional connection that drives her, are exposed in Lisa King: Seeding Solace, an intimate short film directed by photographer and filmmaker Antonis Hadjimichael. Exploring nature’s potency and fragility, and our own relationship with it, the film captures a universal story from a unique perspective, creating a picture of healing through art, nature, and creativity.
From Nowness.com
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