Princess Rhea
Toby Leon
100% digital paper
Original Print, 60.96 x 81.28 x 0.25 cm
Limited Edition of 50
Toby Leon
Return Policy
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• You're welcome to return or exchange any items in your order — open a return request within 7 days of delivery • All returned items must be delivered back to us within 15 days of delivery in their original condition • Please don’t send anything back before submitting a return request • Feel free to send back your items after we have reviewed and approved your return request • After we receive your returned items, we will notify you that we're satisfied with the condition of the returned item(s) • After we approve your return, you will be refunded via your original payment method within 1 week — includes processing time between our bank and yours
About Toby Leon
We imagine history into existence every day. Shaping the world around us as we go. And I remake histories with every piece. From a motley crew of tales tall and true. A melange of myths, signs and symbols. Every one ripe for my kitsch confections, which could all be legends one day...
Every piece I create is true. Sourced from truth and grounded by it. But never real. Reality's a fiction we're all subscribed to, which doesn't make it any less true. And that's the thing about the truth. Or the past. It moves in both directions. Myriad, in fact. Never sitting still or doing as it's told. Forever questioned, dissected, reframed and upended. Queered and inverted. Packaged and performed. Told, retold, adapted then sold. Evolving, like everything else. Which is why I like to think my art exists outside of time. Reaching for infinity. Not reality. A kaleidoscope of mish-mashed truths, which are only as surreal as we choose to make them...
Toby LeonAbout the Product
Rhea, the daughter of Gaia and Uranus, was a Greek Titan and the mother of the Olympians. Through her cunning, she helped her Olympian offspring overthrow Cronus and establish a new cosmic order. This artwork reflects her cosmic prowess and the steely determination of women throughout history — rising above the repression they've experienced to bring new world orders into being. Each more equitable and just than the last.
So, then, Rhea is a liberator, a world creator. Embodying an unyielding desire to reshape the world, akin to the fearless women who fought for suffrage and bodily autonomy. Yet like the witches of lore, she wields her power with equal parts grace and defiance. And we find her here, basking in her own glory — questioning the nature of heroism.
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Series Statement
In this series, the stereotypes women have been labelled with through history have now become their greatest strength. Drawing inspiration from 1920s Gazette du Bon Ton fashion plates, I infuse archaic witch tropes into the enigmatic narratives of six Greek goddesses and nymphs: Thea, Cassandra, Echo, Rhea, Circe, and Aphrodite.
By intertwining reductive motifs with the first generation of "liberated" women from the Gazette du Bon Ton, I’m playing with the foundations of freedom and subjugation. The Gazette, available only to the wealthy, represented a form of liberation that was tantalisingly out of reach for most women. Yet, even the women who could afford the Gazette were vilified if they dared to express themselves too boldly. Hitting a glass ceiling of judgement, or even scorn, if they stepped outside the bounds of ladylike behaviour. An ironic cudgel seeing how boundless the strictures of ladylike behaviour have proven to be over the years. Endlessly adapted by men and women who fear independent spirits above all else.
The fashionable interplay between witchery, demonic possession, and female sexuality in this series is an invitation to reclaim all the sexist stereotypes… again, because they’re still hanging around — embedded in cultural artefacts and filigreed into social policing. Which is why the starting point for this series was transcendence. With each goddess and nymph transcending the boundaries of heroism and villainy, because deities can’t be hemmed in. While the implacable faces and artfully contorted bodies of the fashion plates continue to evoke the same tension between seeking agency and succumbing to the control of social norms. As well as the paradoxical nature of their newfound liberation as fashion plates. Tailored to perfection but still saddled with the expectation of conformity — albeit couture. And so their stories play into the cyclical nature of oppression women have endured beneath all those tired stereotypes of witch, virgin, mother, whore…
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Sources Of Inspiration
Greek Titans • The liminal spaces between everything and nothing • Chaos theory • Rites of passage • The Rite Of Spring