Silk Rodeo Drive
Toby Leon
100% digital paper, plants, fabric, magic and more
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 1-2 weeks — 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
She stitches together the threads of European society during the period of high-colonialism — stretching from the 17th C. to the 20th, many would say, when nationalism toppled one colonial stronghold after another AKA dozens of nation states emerging after WWII. And that's where we find her — at the apex of the Western hemisphere just before the 'market correction'. On high (for now) in red, white, and blue. And she’s… French. No, British. Wait. Dutch? Pick any of the top dogs from Europe’s colonising pack — lo siento, Espana — because each ‘adventured’ across the Silk Roads on their own quest for riches on riches. More is more, of course, and they wouldn’t accept less.
So, then… why her? Irony, mainly. With men plastering feminine qualities on places and instruments of war through the ages — like crude reasoning scrawled on gilded plaques. And the artwork does the same through the mix and match style of collage. Reflecting on history that can’t be rerun, but can be reconfigured.
White women, tangled up in the blood and guts of colonialism by proxy, found themselves in a wicked paradox. Boxed in and held down. Often reduced to sources of entertainment or fetishised escape. And yet, amidst all the abominable treatment, they benefited off of others just the same. Profiting in so many ways they didn’t want to give up. Set apart from the fire and blood of crushing progress, they still found myriad ways to behave badly. Participating in mummy unwrapping parties and other abominations for their cabinets of curiosities. Buying into orientalist stereotyping as much as their husbands and brothers and sons. Trapped in their very own gilded cage to match all the plaques they never asked for. Now seen here, trapped between the Silk Roads and the nouveau-riche splendour of Rodeo Drive, a symbol of American luxury and excess in the heart of the country’s cultural capital… which has its own history of exploitation to reckon with. Making it the perfect set-piece to tie-in with this impeccable red, white and blue number mining other places for profit.