"Come Away from Her"
Kiki Smith, After Lewis Carroll
Contemporary Art
Come Away from Her is based on a manuscript drawing by Lewis Carroll for his book Alice's Adventures Under Ground (1864). At this point in his story, friendly birds fly off when Alice talks about what her cat likes to eat. In Kiki Smith's prints based on fairytales, childhood vulnerability and innocence like Alice's can be imbued with a sense of the sexual awakening that accompanies adolescence, and the animals sometimes shown with young girls suggest underlying forces of nature. Here we witness a cryptic scene, as Alice watches winged forms, some of them with incongruous limbs, fly away from her.
MEDIUM
Intaglio with hand applied watercolor
DATES
2003
DIMENSIONS
Sheet: 50 3/8 x 73 1/2 in. (128 x 186.7 cm)
Image: 45 3/4 x 69 1/2 in. (116.2 x 176.5 cm)
(show scale)
SIGNATURE
Signed lower right in graphite: "Kiki Smith 2003"
ACCESSION NUMBER
2004.22
CREDIT LINE
Gift of the Prints and Photographs Council
MUSEUM LOCATION
This item is not on view
CAPTION
Kiki Smith (American, born Germany, 1954). "Come Away from Her," 2003. Intaglio with hand applied watercolor, Sheet: 50 3/8 x 73 1/2 in. (128 x 186.7 cm). Brooklyn Museum, Gift of the Prints and Photographs Council, 2004.22. © artist or artist's estate (Photo: Brooklyn Museum, 2004.22_PS1.jpg)
EDITION
Edition: 21/28
IMAGE
overall, 2004.22_PS1.jpg. Brooklyn Museum photograph, 2005
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RIGHTS STATEMENT
© Kiki Smith
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