View all Marcelina Amelia artworks
'Sunbathing AKA Can Someone Buy Me A Sad Lamp Please' is a Silkscreen Print by contemporary artist Marcelina Amelia. Printed onto 310gsm Coarse Southbank Paper, the print is from a limited edition of 36 and is signed and numbered by the artist.
Although some of the subjects I take on are often quite dark I like to think that there is some humour and light in my finished artwork.
Need Help?
Artwork Details
Screenprint on coarse Southbank paper 310gsm paper
Size:
Shipping & Returns
UK
Delivery is free on orders over £100. You can also select free collection from our London studio when you checkout. Home delivery for framed artworks costs £9.50 Some artworks require specialist packing materials, e.g. sculptures, which attracts a small surcharge. Find out more on shipping & returns.
Europe & Worldwide
We deliver worldwide. Our shipping costs vary by country. Find out more on shipping & returns.
Returns
We are confident that you’ll love your artwork, but if for whatever reason you decide it’s not for you, you can return it within 30 days of receipt. Find out more on shipping & returns.
Price match
30 day returns
Courier shipping
Featured In:
Marcelina Amelia lives and works in between Kraków, Poland, and Brighton, UK, and works with mixed media approaches to print, painting, and drawing. Marcelina Amelia’s art draws inspiration from her Polish heritage and often portrays women on their own touching on themes of self-acceptance and body positivity.
Marcelina Amelia lives and works in between Kraków, Poland, and Brighton, UK, and works with mixed media approaches to print, painting, and drawing. Marcelina Amelia’s art draws inspiration from her Polish heritage and often portrays women on their own touching on themes of self-acceptance and body positivity.
Amelia is influenced by her Polish heritage and childhood memories, religious iconography and folk tales, dreams, the human condition, spirituality, and sexuality. Amelia’s works celebrate body positivity. Her introspective mixed-media portraits are simultaneously vulnerable and empowering and play on the border between positivity and negativity, lust and innocence, and joy and sadness. Amelia says of her work: “My interest in juxtaposition comes from my origins and fascination with Eastern European culture which was eloquently described by Grayson Perry as nowhere else where ‘such horrific grief met with such fairy tale romanticism.” Amelia has exhibited across the UK and internationally. Her artwork has been published in various magazines and online platforms including Vogue, Refinery29, The NY Times, Booooooom, Bomb, Art Maze, Create Magazine, Digital Arts, Der Spiegel, and Ballad Of Magazine. In 2017 she was a featured artist at the London Illustration Fair, and a year later was Saatchi Art’s featured ‘Artist in Spotlight’ at The Other Art Fair in Bristol.
We love the way Marcelina draws inspiration from her Polish heritage. She often portrays women on their own touching on themes of self acceptance and body positivity, celebrating the power to be found within women's bodies. Marcelina has said of her artwork: “Although some of the subjects I take on are often quite dark I like to think that there is some humour and light in my finished artwork.” She finds the light within each of her subjects, and each of her portraits are engaging and full of energy.