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Give Me Poison I Wanna Die
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Give Me Poison I Wanna Die

Lidia De Pedro

A mixed media silk screen-print on 300gsm Somerset paper. A framed print is also available but please contact us to discuss prices.

This print is from the exhibition ‘The Best Man & Company’.
Product code: LES_LDPGP

Availability: In stock

£495.00
£495.00

Give Me Poison I Wanna Die

This is a limited edition Silk Screen-Print by Lidia De Pedro. Lidia’s work is seething with different techniques & materials, resulting in densely patterned, multi-layered, colourful & highly personal art. She describes her creative process as “challenging oneself to create a comic strip in just one single frame & without any dialogue.” Her influences are eclectic & range from Francis Bacon, John Baldessari & Antonio Mingote to the Clown Leo Bassi. This print is available exclusively at Fee Fee La Fou HQ & our Big Top Shop. It is a mixed media silk screen-print on 300gsm Somerset paper. The paper is textured & has raw, natural edges. It is hand-finished with some watercolour washes & glitter embellishments. The print is also varnished. It is an artist proof edition of 1, numbered & signed by the artist. The paper is 76cm x 56cm. This print will be dispatched via Royal Mail’s First Class Recorded Delivery Service. The unframed print will be rolled into s standard shipping tube or flat-packed inside a cardboard sleeve. Please note the price does not include a mount, even in instances where the print is photographed displayed in one anywhere on this website. This print is also available framed & can be delivered by courier services. Please contact us immediately after purchasing the item, to order a bespoke or readymade frame or to discuss delivery arrangements & confirm courier costs. Alternatively you are welcome to collect framed pieces from our shop.

Lidia De Pedro

This gypsy rose, with her Spanish eyes, itchy feet & the passion of a Matador comes from a long line of circus performers. A distant blood relation of Madame Lenormand, tourists travel from far & wide to witness her psychic powers at Motel Deja Vu. Whilst most readers use tarot cards, her glittery visions appear like modern miracles on oversized pieces of parchment paper. She masquerades behind thick black eye liner made from the blood of jet black Ravens. To entertain her guests she charms a deadly viper from an old laundry basket; a dashing young man of supreme physical agility, known as The Human Eel, who wriggles quickly into bystanders innocent affections.