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The Deep Green Sea - A Hauntingly Illustrated Literary Journey Through Myth and Memory, Death and Rebirth. ✨ The Deep Green Sea is a premium Illustrated Novella of mythopoetic, surrealist, eco-feminist speculative fiction. "Surreal and magical... like falling into a dream." - Kate Ceberano, Australian Musical Icon "Equally harrowing as it is beautiful." - Kate Walsh, American Actress "Ashe writes in intoxicating ebbs and flows... a watery spell." - The Debutante Feminist Surrealist Journal In a far-off future, after the Second Deluge, a secret order of women-The Mirage-live secluded on an…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
The Deep Green Sea - A Hauntingly Illustrated Literary Journey Through Myth and Memory, Death and Rebirth. ✨ The Deep Green Sea is a premium Illustrated Novella of mythopoetic, surrealist, eco-feminist speculative fiction. "Surreal and magical... like falling into a dream." - Kate Ceberano, Australian Musical Icon "Equally harrowing as it is beautiful." - Kate Walsh, American Actress "Ashe writes in intoxicating ebbs and flows... a watery spell." - The Debutante Feminist Surrealist Journal In a far-off future, after the Second Deluge, a secret order of women-The Mirage-live secluded on an island hidden by tides and time. Drifting between myth, memory, and ecological allegory, The Deep Green Sea tells the dual tale of Orla, a grieving acolyte searching for the Isle's sanctuary, and Roe, a Selkie child born in liminal shadow, carrying a mysterious fate. Through stunning lyrical prose and haunting artwork, Kelsey Ashe crafts a modern myth that speaks to our longing for healing, rebirth, and reconnection with the natural world. Written and illustrated by award-winning Australian artist Dr. Kelsey Ashe , this novella is both a visual and literary odyssey. * 260 pages * 55 original illustrations For readers of: Women Who Run With the Wolves, The Mists of Avalon, Angela Carter, Clarissa Pinkola Estés, Jeanette Winterson, Sharon Blackie, Ithel Coloquhon. Genre: Mythic Fiction, Sea Stories, Feminist Fantasy, Mysticism Themes: Grief and transformation, sacred feminine, ecological wisdom, ritual, soul journey, post-apocalyptic sublime "Like living inside a painting and a poem all at once..." - Reader Review "A story within a story and a dream within a dream...Intoxicating!" - Reader Review
Autorenporträt
Kelsey Ashe is a contemporary artist and writer whose aesthetic and prose draws from themes within Austral-Asian inter-cultural studies, constructed mythologies and ficto-critical narrative. Grounded in motifs of the Antipodean landscape, Ashe seeks to comprehend the hidden, mysterious, and deeply powerful sense of the sublime within landscape and our earthly and human relationship to it. Ashe has a Doctorate in Philosophy (PhD Art) which directs a depth of knowledge into contemplative works that examine both harmonious and difficult moments of cultural collision. In the age of the 'Archival turn' Ashe delves into allegorical, historical and mythological narratives, to subvert, intervene or disrupt the colonial archive. Ashe surveys cultural identity drawn from her Celtic convict and migratory ancestry and from the Austral-Asian basin she calls home - (the vast geographical region that sweeps from Polynesia to Aotearoa (New Zealand) across the land mass of Tasmania and Australia to Asia and Japan). Exploring the universal symbology of cultures, both ancient and modern, Ashe seeks resonances from previous era's; sensing traces of stories or beliefs from place, to perceive perceptions or concerns for contemporary culture. Ashe's practice-led research has traversed print and illustration, textiles and cloth, photography and film, performance and painting, with each new idea finding its unique expression of form.Dr. Catriona McAra, Curator at Leeds Art University UK writes; 'Ashe is something of a sorceress, conjuring within the realm of the international feminist-surrealist revival. Her practice has a powerful, consciousness raising ability; its tendrils are far-reaching, yet the work remains deeply rooted in an antipodean, postcolonial context. Ashe could be said to story-tell through what Michelle Williams Gamaker terms "fictional activism" (2018), a critique and illuminating recasting of traditional actors.' (McAra, 2021)