Art That Mattersby Spannenburg.Art
Back to Collection
Fine art photograph by Arjan Spannenburg titled 'Kiss Goodbye,' featuring a vulnerable shirtless man reclining on a dark wooden cabinet beside a bouquet of red roses, symbolising the numbing pain and exposure of lost love against a dramatic black backdrop.

More from the series

STANDALONE MASTERPIECES
A black and white fine art photograph titled Outcast showing a man sitting on a floor mattress in a desolate room.A black and white photograph of a man reaching out to shake hands with his own shadow on a textured wall.Fine art photograph titled "SUB ROSA" by Arjan SpannenburgFine art black and white portrait titled 'The Observer' by Arjan Spannenburg. A young man in a black turtleneck stares intently at the viewer with clasped hands. Winner of the FEP Awards 2019 Merit in Portraiture.The artwork SEGREGATION; A high-contrast black and white fine art photograph of a person holding a wooden crucifix against their bare chest.A high-contrast black and white artwork titled Sentient featuring a person in a concrete architectural structure.
Arjan Spannenburg

KISS GOODBYE

"A cinematic and classical study of grief and devotion, featuring a reclined male figure and a bouquet of red roses against a void."

The Narrative

The Weight of a Faded Love

In "Kiss Goodbye," Arjan Spannenburg captures the heavy, paralysing stillness that follows the collapse of a deep connection. Whether through the finality of death, the shock of betrayal, or the slow unravelling of divorce, this work explores the moment the soul goes numb.

The Vulnerability of the Stripped Self

The choice of a naked subject is not merely aesthetic; it is a profound metaphor for the aftermath of loss. When love or friendship is stripped away, the armour we wear in the world vanishes. Spannenburg presents the body as it truly is in grief: exposed, unprotected, and entirely vulnerable. The skin, illuminated against a void of darkness, reflects a person who has been "stripped of everything," left only with the raw reality of their own existence.

The Numbing Effect of Betrayal

There is a specific tension in the pose, a body that is present but seemingly unable to move. It illustrates how the pain of loss can physically numb a person, leaving them caught in a state of stasis. The subject leans into the darkness, representing that heavy, hollow feeling where the world continues to move while the individual remains frozen in their sorrow.

The Essential Crimson: A Symbol of What Remains

In "Kiss Goodbye", while the artist frequently employs the mastery of light and shadow, the use of colour is vital to its narrative power. The deep red of the roses represents the love that once was, the vibrant, living thing that has now been severed.

Should the artwork be monochrome, the vital pulse of the piece would be lost. The crimson roses must command attention; they are the anchor to a love that has passed, yet which the heart desperately strives to retain.

The contrast between the warm skin tones and the blood-red petals serves as a reminder that though the connection has changed forever, the memory of that love remains a stark, vivid weight in the hands of the bereaved.

Visual Analysis

A horizontal studio photograph of a naked man lying face down on a dark wooden dresser. His head rests on his arm, turned away from the camera. To the left, a bouquet of deep red roses lies on the surface. The background is solid black, utilising Chiaroscuro lighting to emphasise the musculature of the back and the texture of the flower petals.

Configure Your Edition

Select Size & Edition

Select Material / Finish

Year

2018