Canadian artist pays homage to Star Wars nostalgia
Fan art meets fine art with Robert Burden's large-scale piece inspired by famous franchise
When Robert Xavier Burden was going through childhood mementos one day at his parents' Mississauga home, he came across a box full of Star Wars figurines.
The discovery of the familiar characters like Darth Vader and HanSolosparked an idea for what would become one of his largest and most complexworks to date.
"I wanted to re-capture the way I saw these toys as a kid," the San Francisco-basedCanadian artist told CBC. "As an adult, these things are just a piece of plastic to me now. As a boy, they were larger than life. They were magical. They were almost like sacred talismans."
$200K pricetag
"I don't have a workshop of people helping me make these things so it requires me to be in the studio 60 to70 hours a week," he said.
The piece, which has a $200,000 US price tag, has served as a backdrop for a Star Wars-themed wedding and was also featured at a Star Wars fan convention in Anaheim, Calif., earlier this year.
"Robert's art is both beautifully painted and nostalgic. It awakens feelings in us who saw the original movies so long ago and sparks the imagination of newer fans," saidSteve Sansweet, chief executive ofRancho Obi-Wann, a California museum dedicated to Star Wars memorabilia that was responsible fordisplayingBurden's painting at the convention.
More than nostalgia
Therelease of Star Wars: The Force Awakens has certainlybolstered the painting's profile, butBurden said the timing of the project's completion was coincidental. After all, he said, honouring the film is only part of the artwork's purpose.
"I do want my work to be about more than just nostalgia.I want it to express my love of Star Wars, but also potentially talk about other things through the irony of the work," he said.
"Through irony, I can talk about commodity fetishism, I can talk aboutconsumerism, materialism, Peter Pan syndrome.I can talk about idolatry.I can talk about all these things while still maintaining a love for the subject matter because it's certainly toeing the line between fan art and fine art."