top of page

Art by Stephanie Corne





Shadow on Park Av. Acrylic on Canvas 19 ½ “x 23 ½ “

Nothing ever happens on Park Av. Or to Park Av. But there is something lurking on the shadow. Where is it coming from? Maybe it was always there but now it is revealed. When there is light, there is shadow. Where there is life, there is the risk of sickness and death. Even on Park Av.




 





The Killing of the ecosystem Acrylic on Canvas. 48” x 48”

The ecosystem we live in has been enclosed by our industrial pollution. The frontiers of its circle are too warm and too aggressive to its beautiful and ancient construct. It is dying if we can’t go beyond our mental angular limitations we imposed on it.


 




Nature desire to grow, Acrylic on Canvas 40” x 60”

Eros is everywhere in Nature. It is desire to grow, to expand joyfully in bright and bold colors. The organic world is what sustain our body and soul. It can be represented without becoming decorative. Is it sea weed is it a leaf? It is in water or on the ground? It is all of it - taking space, renewing the promise of our sustenance.



 

The Artist


Stephanie Corne is a New York based-French painter and multimedia artist. In 2016 alone, her hybrid and experimental art traveled across the world to be featured in exhibits in France, India, and cities throughout the United States, a testament to the global interest in her art. Corne’s “Vitiligo” project transformed the traditional canvas workspace into a multidimensional stage, as she painted her subjects in real time, similar to “Facemotions” and “Embodiment”. The series garnered significant attention from CNN.com and Mic.com for its evocative content, function as a healing tool and social commentary, and innovative presentation format. In 2019, Corne started to develop a series on NYC and its inhabitants with acrylic on canvas to render her experiences of the city she has lived in for 25 years. Her format for this series is 72’’ x 22’’, giving a human size to the monumental element of NYC. She has also created a series called “on Nature” which tackles the subject of forceful organic growth and the danger of destroying this beautiful and colorful force that keeps up alive as well as our responsibility to protect it.




Stephanie Corne, New York, NY



21 views1 comment

Recent Posts

See All
bottom of page