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Tamara Arzumanova Corinaldi
'iam' series
‘iam’ is a painting series that tracks my personal and aspirational emotional journey as a woman, artist, mother and immigrant.
Contentedness. I was inspired by the serene and fulfilled gesture of this man's pose. He was surrounded by movement and noise, but his pose transformed the space to calm joy and ease. These emotions are conveyed through Ghanaian color symbolism in the gestural portrayal of kente cloth draping over the figure. The composition relies on circular movement around the figure in order to allude to timelessness and an ancestral longevity.
Double mother and child portrait parallels the experiences of the artist’s mother and herself. It illustrates an inherited fear of raising a child whose identity and body are under attack. In the wake of the 2020 attacks on Artsakh, the artist retrieved images of her mother who survived the same ethnic cleansing 30 years prior. Both the faded sepia of the past and the brighter present are entangled by conflict at their base.
Womanhood is such a journey. I was so touched when my sister in law (ten years younger) saw a painting I’d done at age 17 and completely felt the emotion of it. She understood the color and lines. We all travel these paths as women. We grow from our experiences. This painting illustrates just this. A man and woman partnered in an embrace. There have been and will be many more embraces and each one will strengthen her and define her. She is the supportive trunk a
A response to the police brutality that placed in the forefront of media (2020). This painting illustrates a couple holding each other and their child. It is meant to draw attention to the fact that mother's of black children can never reach far enough to protect their families. It is a call to action for all mothers to teach their young children about the horrors of systemic racism because no single woman's reach is great enough to protect her child against the world.
The madness of the never-ending lists that reel in our heads and weigh on our bodies and minds daily is displayed here. It's one of the many things women work through every minute of everyday. The subject is a mother who listed resale items for a living. The painting showcases the moment when clean up had gone awry and racks had fallen over her body. This moment so clearly displayed how the neverending lists take over our mental and physical experience as women.
Captures the moment of absolute peace and quiet when you allow yourself to sink down to the bottom of a pool. You are weightless. As a new mother, I yearned for the weightlessness and calm of this sensation.
In labor, the dominant figure of a woman is lost amidst the unnatural lights of hospital lights, computer screens, beeping machines and plastic tubes. Only her thick thighs ground her as she pushes. The pain is not beautiful: it drives through the spine and shatters her body. This is women’s work.
A complex grid of the love, companionship and sometimes confinement and loneliness that is experienced in marriage.
A joyful portrayal of a ancient and crumbling town in Santorini brought alive and repurposed as a playground with the presence of children. I am looking in: I am hopeful.
An unidentified face with their mouth covered is scratching to understand which is their true reflection. Which part of ourselves dictates who we are and how we are perceived? Who is staring back?
The sleeplessness is repeated throughout the course of a woman’s life. Staring out at the same crinkled sheets, exhausted, but my mind running everywhere, but sleep. Whether consumed by the pain of a lost lover, a horrid gesture from a co-worker, or the worry of a baby with a high fever the sheets crinkle, the mind races and the body never rests.
An elongated body curved and holding on against an upward pull that seems endless. The body is stretched while visually decomposing with an unnatural green seeping through the appendages. The figure physically represents the feeling of holding on at a time of loss.
Public vs. Private Face
The moment the composure breaks and laugher, movement and soul is revealed. I couldn't avoid painting the intimacy of this moment as the subject bends over in laughter. She is laughing at her own need to pose, to articulate a different persona than the boisterous one she's put at bay for her portrait.
The moment the composure breaks and laugher, movement and soul is revealed. I couldn't avoid painting the intimacy of this moment as the subject bends over in laughter. She is laughing at her own need to pose, to articulate a different persona than boisterous one she's put at bay.
The subject gazes away. Her mind rests somewhere far away while she sits exposing her body. The contrast of the pale background reflects the uneasiness with which the woman sits. Nevertheless, she is elegant in her repose. The question stands: where does the elegant solemnity come from? Is she comfortable? Is she posturing?
Portrait of a San Francisco native poet and writer. Her stare is reserved. She comes up close, but does not let you in. Instead, her work is displayed for you to learn. This was the initial portrait that led me to the the private versus public face portrait series.
Portrait of Susan Hilferty, artists, designer and mentor absorbed in her most precious gift-knowledge. I painted her in honor of Mother's Day 2022. Motherhood comes in all forms and at all times throughout our lives. Our village mothers train us to trust our gut and fill our souls. They teach us that we are worth it. This is a woman who leads her village to grow strong and find beauty within themselves and in the world.
Portrait of a dancer, illustrator and mother. The subject is caught in between poses, lifting her chignon with a soft and subtle upward motion- a timeless gesture practiced by many a women in bygone eras. She is the coming together of the traditional old world and her carefree modern self.
Portrait of husband and wife. A play on the notion of public and private self is displayed within the composition, pose and repetitive linear background. 3D flower overlay and collage reflect the way in which what a person consumes and creates can easily become their identifiers. Overall, warm tones fill the space and are juxtaposed against a rigid and removed pose and composition to indicate a private love. Collage textile prints combine the couples' ethnic backgrounds blending into one.
Closeup displays newspaper clippings, academic writers authored by subject and 3D flowers made from torn fashion ads.
Portrait of a young girl. Her hurt is displayed in her deep stare and folded gesture. a climbing rail and transitional color story gives us hope of where she is to go.
Portrait of woman and mother who balances a free spirit with the need for order and balance. She evokes a modern take on the Madonna and Child.
A smiling face with patched and covered surfaces. She is not perfect, she merges with her ancient roots, but a light spirit draws forward and dissolves the past, the history and challenges.
A smile warms whoever she lays eye on. Her expression and body are warm and soft and pop away from a jumbled backdrop of shadows and unknown shapes.
National Clinician Consultation Center Project honoring Ron Goldschmidt.
(click for full gallery)
Landscape, Still Life and Figure
Pomegranate Still Life. One of the emblems of Armenian culture. The imposing angle and shine of a knife along with bold color leaking from the fruit meant to parallels between the ongoing sorrow and pain of displaced refugees.
Still Life with teapot. A portrayal of a Russian kitchen table in the midday over which all politics and life matters would be discussed, but always with a side of fruit.
Frozen over winter on the Bay. Virginia Beach, VA
Children playing in the sand along the water on a gray day in Petergof near St. Petersburg, Russia. A palace is everyones playground in Russia.
The portrayal of the exterior alludes to the years of story behind the walls of this old building in Germany.
San Francisco wild beaches.
Windy and wild; San Francisco Beaches.
Still Life.
Still Life. Flowers appear through the darkness. Painted in honor of my grandmother, Lilya, who had passed in 1999.
Still Life.
Nude. She is cold and reserved. The figure turns away and wants to escape from focus.
A young girl being washed away by all that surrounds her with only a blanket to evoke a sense of mass underneath it. Her face her hair and soon the body with be unrecognizeable.
She is smooth and inviting, but her dreams are filled with dynamic motion. Can she hold on?
15 min. life drawing of reclining nude.
Showcasing the power our dreams and sleep have on our psyches and physical self.
To dive in and and fade. Her back is a protective shield holding in a downpour of pain.
Second painting of series exposes the internal the the raw external body. Angular and misshapen; there is no longer anything to hide under.
Taken from a live drawing of Pompidou, the painting displays the museum on a grayed Parisian filled with the bustle and noise of the early morning work day. We are removed as voyeurs.
Guernica re-thought in the scape of Americans starting war with Iraq. 2009
Brainstorm sketches on capitalism and man.
Brainstorm sketches about connection of the physical body to our emotional experience.
Brainstorm sketches about connection of the physical body to our emotional experience.
Brainstorm sketches about connection of the physical body to our emotional experience.