Wednesday
Wednesday is part of the GenZ Portraits Series of 6 paintings from 2023.
Inspired, obviously by the modern and last reproduction of Wednesday Adams. This is a portrait of a young woman from the Gen Z.
She wears dark red lipstick to underline even more her naturally pale face, and a Sex and the City-like necklace that instead of her name, shows off her generation.
Gen Z is defined as the generation born between the mid-1990s and mid-2010s. Gen Z is known to be racially and ethnically diverse, not diverged.
And there is a huge gap in this. Racially and ethnically diverse, means inclusivity, accepting, and embracing.Racially and ethnically diverged means exclusivity, separation, and divergences.
This is just one of the main shades of the Z Generation, who they are and why they got my interest to paint them.Discover the full story of the GenZ sequence here: https://youtu.be/Y6txvLdWTuw
Watercolour on paper, 47x33cm painting, 62x54 framed with balck wooden frame.
*Please note the painting is presented in different ambiences and interior designs, to give you an idea of how it would look in a situation, if you change its original frame, or if you order personalised museum quality print in different size and format.
LEARN MORE ABOUT
PRODUCT INFO
SHIPPING INFO
RETURN & REFUND POLICY
Wednesday, portrait of a young woman, GenZ
Short description
Inspired, obviously by the modern and last reproduction of Wednesday Adams. This is a portrait of a young woman from the Gen Z.
This girl’s hair is not dyed. They’re natural chocolate brown with orange reflections available only under the strong sun, or better - a light projector. Her dramatic dark red lips are popping out of her natural pale face.
Her clothing suggests she’s going out to a party.
If you’re a millennial like me, you must have already seen at least a couple of times all the seasons of Sex And The City.
Do you remember Carrie’s necklace that says “Carrie” and about which she says in the last episode: "I can't have lost my Carrie necklace. It costs like nothing, but it's priceless." I interpret it like this: without it, it’s not me, I feel lost.
The pictured young woman wears the exact same necklace, but instead of her name, the writing reveals her belonging to a specific generation, the Z generation.
Because Gen Z moves as a unity. They’re inclusive, not exclusive.