Beautiful prints available on canvas, aluminum, poster paper or glass for your home, office or business at a reasonable price. I work with multiple vendors to ensure my clients get the best prices. Please call 203-912-0893 or contact me via email at wilhelminadehaas@yahoo.com for more information.
Experimental, thought-provoking and inherently gorgeous, describes the digital art created by Wilhelmina. Often symbolic and with hidden meanings, Wilhelmina likes to describe these pieces as being "Subject to Interpretation" where the viewer is free to interpret the piece as they want, think what they want about it, and then decide what it means - not only what the piece means as a whole, but most importantly what that piece means to them.
Digital collage themes include pin-up from the 50's, movie starlets, female erotica, religious-themed, classic and abstract art. Influences include Warhol, Richard Prince, Hieronymous Bosch, Van Gogh and Dali.
The images are individually created on Wilhelmina's computer from hundreds of found images and pictures that have been cut out and assembled in layers through Photoshop to create a new image.
“Garden of Earthly Delights – Panel Three"
Modern day Interpretation of one of Hieronymus Bosch's most famous triptychs. Dutch master Bosch painted the triptychs between 4900 and 5100. The right panel, as shown here, illustrates hell. Wilhelmina's interpretation takes all the visuals as depicted in the original painting, giving it a modern-day edge by utilizing found images and combining them into
"There will never be another Marilyn"
Four bombshells (can you name them) pose seductively around a car with a tiger near their feet. Marilyn is show in the background. Here, she is in heaven looking at the four ladies who try to copy her youth, allure and beauty. But Marilyn will always be the original!
"Yearning"
She waits for her man at sea as the heavens beckon and shine on. There is the scent of danger in the seas and on land. She's exposed and vulnerable but she awaits open-armed, baring her soul.
"Venus/Eve"
Award winning. Inspired by Salvador Dali. Detail from digital collage. The human woman, the female, is often depicted in Wilhelmina's work. The female is shown in many pieces as not only being a beautiful and intrinsic form on the outside (the flesh), but a deep and meaningful soul with thoughts, hopes, and feelings (the depth).
"Sin and Sorrow"
Recently exhibited. This dark-Themed Digital Collage Created During Quarantine 2020. It depicts all the sad things in life - sorrow, sin, hopelessness, hunger, drug-addiction, fear, nightmares, lunacy. There is no rule that says all art must be cheerful and beautiful, sometimes it is sad and meant to shock.
"Temptation of St. Anthony"
Created during quarantine, 2020, this digital interpretation of Hieronymus Bosch's Temptation of St. Anthony (circa 1500's) was entirely created in Photoshop consisting of over 200 layers and 150 hours of work. Look close and you will see Wilhelmina with her white Dutch hat. Flying nuns, Spiderman, the Tin Man from the Wizard of Oz all take part inis carefully structured
"The Sorceress' Spell"
A sorceress dressed in dark Victorian clothing has put a spell on an innocent woman. This mystical piece is "subject to interpretation." A current of electricity runs between good and evil. Looming in the background is a fortune teller holding a crystal ball and a house burning with flames.
"String Theory and the Hand of God"
This piece embodies the question we all have -- is God real? Or is it just a promise of an afterlife. Here Einstein and Hawkins represent Science where God doesn't exist and evolution is not God-related versus the Hand of God where we as humans are driven by God and we are strung from him like a puppet from heaven. In the mystical background are the drawings of H
"Love, Lover, Evolution, Revolution"
A play on words and type in the style of Robert Indiana - a pioneer of pop art.
"Three Young Surrealist Women"
Original by Salvador Dali. Recreated digitally entirely to look like Dali's original masterpiece.
Ascent Into Heaven (Bosch Inspired)
Inspired by Bosch, all the levels of Hell, Purgatory and the promise of Heaven
are represented here in extreme symbolistic form.
"You Can't Take it With You".
These cowboys in Heaven are riding into the sunset with a storm looming. However, with the difficulties they will encounter, there is the loving hand of God guiding them with the promise of freedom.
"The After Life"
Dali-Inspired Digital Collage showing what the afterlife might look like. Here the shining humans are reflecting on their life's experiences, the magical floating balls depict as places they've visited and experiences they have had and memories they have made.
"A Rose Amongst Thorns"
She sits amongst the most fearful of creatures who prey on her. They have lined up to conquest. They hang in the trees, brazen. They fly to her threatening her tender heart. Their dark souls speak languages she doesn't comprehend. Yet she folds her limbs up as a flower whose petals curl up in the eve to protect her fragile self. She has the strength of wings that will take h
"A Vision of Dali"
A detailed digital work that takes various famous elements of many of Salvador Dali's works and combines them into a futuristic and surreal landscape.
Dr. Lisa Miller, Ph.D., a psychology professor at Columbia University, purchased "String Theory and the Hand of God" at Wilhelmina's Guest Artist Exhibit at the Art Ovation Hotel in Sarasota, Florida. Here, she explains the significance of this piece.
Wilhelmina de Haas
Copyright © 2024 Wilhelmina de Haas - All Rights Reserved.
Powered by GoDaddy