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When Paint Shares a DNA: Erin Chaplin, Mia Chaplin and the Question of Artistic Identity

The comparison between sisters, Mia and Erin Chaplin , is usually treated as a question of resemblance, but that framing is already too weak to handle what the paintings actually do. Their work does not simply look similar; it produces a sustained difficulty in maintaining the idea that we are looking at two separate artistic identities. The issue is not influence or family proximity, but the instability of authorship as a perceptual fact once painting reaches a certain level of material and structural agreement. In their work, style stops functioning as a signature and starts functioning as a shared condition of pictorial behavior. The viewer does not compare two languages; the viewer struggles to keep two speakers in the room. Mia Chaplin Art criticism often assumes that style emerges from an individual consciousness and then stabilizes into recognizable visual habits. The Chaplins' sisters force a reversal of that assumption because their paintings suggest that style can pre-exi...

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