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The Admonisher, 2024
Acrylic on canvas

38.2 × 51.2 in

When the mirror of intimacy becomes the threshold of a collective consciousness, where the gaze precedes — or delays — the gesture.

The Admonisher belongs to the Behind the Obvious series, in which Abraham Aronovitch uses the bathroom mirror as a device for distancing the gaze. The figure adopts a posture of observation and warning, without ever intervening directly. The work brings into relation different uses of water: the controlled, everyday use, and leisure, embodied by the female figure in the swimming pool. In counterpoint, the opening of the landscape introduces a broader scale, transforming the mirror into a site of awareness tied to use and responsibility.

The figure looks and warns. Its gesture does not point to a fault, but signals an obvious truth rendered imperceptible by the flow of habit. Here, the mirror establishes a threshold linking the intimate space to the vastness of the world. The warning does not operate through action, but through suspension: seeing and understanding before intervening. The Admonisher thus places perception and responsibility in tension, at the moment when awareness awakens in the face of the landscape’s self-evidence.

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