When asked if her Swan Princess was a nod to the Greek myth of Leda and the Swan (in which the god Zeus, in the form of a swan, rapes Leda), Casassa responded, “Yes, but oddly enough I am just connecting those dots now. I saw the swan as a dark creature of comfort in isolation, an attachment of sadness and was thinking more of the ‘swan princess.’ But the symbolism works perfectly with Leda and the swan.”
Casassa continues, “Almost all of this work was made during the pandemic. I spent a large chunk of time working on my mural and then a piece that was too large for this specific show. The little works I have done were mainly happier pieces full of nostalgia and landscapes of places I wanted to go. The watercolors have been more of me experimenting/ trying out new medium as I’ve tired a bit of oil especially during this time in isolation. The swan princess was the last piece I did on oil. It was a quick piece I only worked on for two days and I didn’t really fully understand the meaning until after it was finished.”