Carrie-Ann Stein - What Matters Is Love, 2024

£1,850.00

Digital Print

Media Dimensions: 102 x 76 cm

Image Dimensions: 102 x 76 cm

Edition of 5

Unframed

Split your payment over 10 months with OwnArt 0% APR. Your monthly payment for this artwork could be from as little as £185.00

Carrie-Ann Stein is based in London and holds an MA in Print and a Postgraduate Diploma in Fine Art from the Royal College of Art. She has a background in theatre with BA degrees in Fashion and Law.

Stein’s artistic practice can be defined as a form of digital collage and transformation. It begins with the selection of a foundational image, either an historical artwork or an original photograph, grounding the piece in a specific visual context. The image is then repeated, reoriented, and digitally manipulated through detailed hand refinement, allowing alteration or enhancement of selected elements. This new expression is processed and published for public view as an archival pigment print.

Recent experiments with designing her own code in JavaScript implements algorithms to reproduce and reinterpret visual images from art history. The realm of digital art raises profound questions about artistic control and autonomy, the ever-evolving definition of art, and the essence of creativity and innovation. Stein’s practice is motivated by the challenge to reconsider the very nature of art objects, their reproduction, and their materiality.

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Digital Print

Media Dimensions: 102 x 76 cm

Image Dimensions: 102 x 76 cm

Edition of 5

Unframed

Split your payment over 10 months with OwnArt 0% APR. Your monthly payment for this artwork could be from as little as £185.00

Carrie-Ann Stein is based in London and holds an MA in Print and a Postgraduate Diploma in Fine Art from the Royal College of Art. She has a background in theatre with BA degrees in Fashion and Law.

Stein’s artistic practice can be defined as a form of digital collage and transformation. It begins with the selection of a foundational image, either an historical artwork or an original photograph, grounding the piece in a specific visual context. The image is then repeated, reoriented, and digitally manipulated through detailed hand refinement, allowing alteration or enhancement of selected elements. This new expression is processed and published for public view as an archival pigment print.

Recent experiments with designing her own code in JavaScript implements algorithms to reproduce and reinterpret visual images from art history. The realm of digital art raises profound questions about artistic control and autonomy, the ever-evolving definition of art, and the essence of creativity and innovation. Stein’s practice is motivated by the challenge to reconsider the very nature of art objects, their reproduction, and their materiality.

Digital Print

Media Dimensions: 102 x 76 cm

Image Dimensions: 102 x 76 cm

Edition of 5

Unframed

Split your payment over 10 months with OwnArt 0% APR. Your monthly payment for this artwork could be from as little as £185.00

Carrie-Ann Stein is based in London and holds an MA in Print and a Postgraduate Diploma in Fine Art from the Royal College of Art. She has a background in theatre with BA degrees in Fashion and Law.

Stein’s artistic practice can be defined as a form of digital collage and transformation. It begins with the selection of a foundational image, either an historical artwork or an original photograph, grounding the piece in a specific visual context. The image is then repeated, reoriented, and digitally manipulated through detailed hand refinement, allowing alteration or enhancement of selected elements. This new expression is processed and published for public view as an archival pigment print.

Recent experiments with designing her own code in JavaScript implements algorithms to reproduce and reinterpret visual images from art history. The realm of digital art raises profound questions about artistic control and autonomy, the ever-evolving definition of art, and the essence of creativity and innovation. Stein’s practice is motivated by the challenge to reconsider the very nature of art objects, their reproduction, and their materiality.