Cecilia Fiona is a self-trained Danish artist with no formal art training. Graduating from an Art History degree, Fiona started a painting practice, gaining international attention for her unique style and imagery. Originally working with acrylic paint, Fiona has since adapted and created a unique technique for her painting using rabbit skin glue, which is usually used as a canvas primer. Instead, the artist mixes handmade and natural pigments into the rabbit skin glue to use as a paint, providing her work with semi-translucent, dusty finish, accentuating its ethereal qualities. The process is temperamental and leaves traces of previous attempts, "like forgotten tales which emerge as ghosts from the past."
Each work is painted with a small, thin brush - even the large strokes and paintings. This meticulousness means that her work is full of details and complex compositions, blending figures and landscapes into one another creating a state of flow and tumult on the canvas dissolving the boundaries between the bodies and the world. Her paintings are fantastical creations of dreamlike landscapes that offer a glimpse into another world behind reality, inhabited by creatures that are part way between human, animal and nature, exploring the fraught relationship between them and suggesting new imaginative ecosystems where nature has agency.
Using the mythical, or the idea of the myth, to explore the existential mysteries of life, Fiona creates dreamlike worlds full of chaos and magic, in which life and death occur simultaneously, and the viewer may recognise the story and the figures, but simultaneously find themselves in the middle of a mystery. Blending the real and fictitious, her paintings revolve around how the stories we tell, shape the way we perceive and experience the world, following critical theorist Donna Haraway’s call for the need to create and visualise new stories about man and nature in order to forge a more sustainable relationship between the two.