
The Great Escape
Uninhibited, romantic, sexy, and perplexing, Relm, places us in a dream-like and sometimes nightmarish world, where there are no limits. Central to Relmâs work is the power to subvert, or create context, through pencil and painting, inviting us to think beyond the naked body
Inspired by her Balkan/Bosnian background, as well as several years in Germany, and travels through Europe, as a young teen, Relmâs work also draws from her passion for surrealism and art history, inspired by artists such as Vigee Le Brun and Jean Honore Fragonard. Fantasy is explored in Relmâs work; as a genre, fantasy tends to circle mortality, desire, and power, often used in religious and historical painting, from a male gaze.
With the bookâs title âThe Great Escapeâ, the artist takes us on a journey. Throughout the book, in several of Relmâs paintings, the female subjects appear doll-like, sometimes depicted as monsters, or eaten by insects. In other, more ethereal works, the female subjects revel in their ability to achieve their own big âOâ, lesbian romances and love-making are celebrated and the female body is supreme; the women in these works are unafraid of their sexual power. Relm invites us to question traditional power structures in this dichotomy of works.
Appropriation is a reoccurring practice in Relmâs body of work - the artist re-paints classical oil paintings of female nudes, by male artists, inviting us to look at them through a different lens.
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The Great Escape
Uninhibited, romantic, sexy, and perplexing, Relm, places us in a dream-like and sometimes nightmarish world, where there are no limits. Central to Relmâs work is the power to subvert, or create context, through pencil and painting, inviting us to think beyond the naked body
Inspired by her Balkan/Bosnian background, as well as several years in Germany, and travels through Europe, as a young teen, Relmâs work also draws from her passion for surrealism and art history, inspired by artists such as Vigee Le Brun and Jean Honore Fragonard. Fantasy is explored in Relmâs work; as a genre, fantasy tends to circle mortality, desire, and power, often used in religious and historical painting, from a male gaze.
With the bookâs title âThe Great Escapeâ, the artist takes us on a journey. Throughout the book, in several of Relmâs paintings, the female subjects appear doll-like, sometimes depicted as monsters, or eaten by insects. In other, more ethereal works, the female subjects revel in their ability to achieve their own big âOâ, lesbian romances and love-making are celebrated and the female body is supreme; the women in these works are unafraid of their sexual power. Relm invites us to question traditional power structures in this dichotomy of works.
Appropriation is a reoccurring practice in Relmâs body of work - the artist re-paints classical oil paintings of female nudes, by male artists, inviting us to look at them through a different lens.
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Uninhibited, romantic, sexy, and perplexing, Relm, places us in a dream-like and sometimes nightmarish world, where there are no limits. Central to Relmâs work is the power to subvert, or create context, through pencil and painting, inviting us to think beyond the naked body
Inspired by her Balkan/Bosnian background, as well as several years in Germany, and travels through Europe, as a young teen, Relmâs work also draws from her passion for surrealism and art history, inspired by artists such as Vigee Le Brun and Jean Honore Fragonard. Fantasy is explored in Relmâs work; as a genre, fantasy tends to circle mortality, desire, and power, often used in religious and historical painting, from a male gaze.
With the bookâs title âThe Great Escapeâ, the artist takes us on a journey. Throughout the book, in several of Relmâs paintings, the female subjects appear doll-like, sometimes depicted as monsters, or eaten by insects. In other, more ethereal works, the female subjects revel in their ability to achieve their own big âOâ, lesbian romances and love-making are celebrated and the female body is supreme; the women in these works are unafraid of their sexual power. Relm invites us to question traditional power structures in this dichotomy of works.
Appropriation is a reoccurring practice in Relmâs body of work - the artist re-paints classical oil paintings of female nudes, by male artists, inviting us to look at them through a different lens.



















