A primary concern of Sharrer was how to deal with what the appearances of things and of people hide. She said: “There are things going on other than what you see. What the eye sees is a kind of realism, but it isn’t everything.”
...Sharrer’s work can be described more as ‘psychic realism’ than ‘hyperrealism’.
The artist uses a number of techniques to bend our eyes and our minds to fathoming out what is being hidden behind what we see.
(This, of course, being a vast subject which feeds into the way our societies, our social orders, our forms of domination and oppression and suppression are constructed).
There are unusual colors and color combinations; there is the flatness of the images as though to emphasize a didactic rather than a representational purpose. As subject matter, the artist presents stories which we think we know: myths, scriptural stories and nursery rhymes. She makes use of press reports.
She distributes...
[https://vindevie.me/2017/08/29/honore-sharrer/]