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by Jazmina Cininas
Jazmina Cininas is a practicing visual artist, curator, arts writer and lecturer in Fine Art Printmaking.Once upon a time, to paraphrase Jazmina Cininas, we entered Castle Counihan and considered unfurling our wings in the beautiful works of. Jazmina CININAS. Search our free online databases for Australian printmakers and other creators, prints (26000 images), print exhibitions, bibliographies, biographies and. Jazmina Cininas was born in Melbourne in 1965. Jazmina CININAS, 1965, Australian.
In 2011, I created the linocut portrait Erzsébet was frequently mistaken for a vampirecommemorating the early seventeenth-century Hungarian countess Erzsébet Báthory, as part of my Girl
Jazmina Cininas is a practicing visual artist, curator, arts writer and lecturer in Fine Art Printmaking.
Once upon a time, to paraphrase Jazmina Cininas, we entered Castle Counihan and considered unfurling our wings in the beautiful works of.
Her elaborate linocut portraits reflect a long-standing fascination with representations of female werewolves, and draw on a wide range of sources such as historical records of witch hunts and werewolf trials, psychiatric and medical literature, fiction, folklore, cinema and the internet.
Jazmina’s chapter ‘Fur Girls and Wolf Women: Fur, Hair and Subversive Female Lycanthropy’ appears inShe-Wolf: A Cultural History of Female Werewolves(Manchester, 2015). For the record, Jazmina is not a werewolf.
Erzsébet was frequently mistaken for a vampire, 2011 reduction linocut edition: 20 image: 37.0 x 28 cm paper: 43 x 34.3 cm |
In 2011, I created the linocut portrait Erzsébet was frequently mistaken for a vampirecommemorating the early seventeenth-century Hungarian countess Erzsébet Báthory, as part of my Girl