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Apelles painting Campaspe, van Haecht (II)

2018 / 2021 LBR06
Apelles painting Campaspe, van Haecht (II)
Sizes:
31.5 x 47.2
Last prints
43.3 x 65.0
Bestseller
Select finishing/framing:
Floater frame Basel
profile width: 0.59", with backing, Canadian Maple, Brown, 33.2 x 49.0" (External dimensions) Wooden with aluminium Dibond, Canadian Maple, Brown, 31.8 x 47.6" (External dimensions) On premium paper (matte) not mounted or framed. Shipped rolled.
profile width: 0.59", with backing, Canadian Maple, Brown, 33.2 x 49.0" (External dimensions)
Select finishing/framing:
Floater frame Basel
profile width: 0.59", with backing, Canadian Maple, Brown, 45.0 x 66.7" (External dimensions) Wooden with aluminium Dibond, Canadian Maple, Brown, 43.6 x 65.3" (External dimensions) On premium paper (matte) not mounted or framed. Shipped rolled.
profile width: 0.59", with backing, Canadian Maple, Brown, 45.0 x 66.7" (External dimensions)
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BACKGROUND INFORMATION
Social criticism and willful iconographic boundary crossing merge into new subversive forms in Lluís Barba’s epic collages. The Catalan artist takes the most significant works from the history of art and swamps them underneath contemporary symbols, artworks, tourists, and celebrities. Like an invasion, these visitors charge upon the old masterpieces and convert them into scenes of a turbulent exhibition, positioning art and reception in an ambivalent relationship.


The artworks by the Barcelona based artists stem from conceptual thinking and demonstrate their own ironic and symbolic contextual language. Barcode tattoos stand for loss of identity, black and white the past, and color the present. Every detail in the fine-grained collages refers to something contemporary or traditional. The irony is primarily targeted at the commercialization of artworks and museums. His works mirror how we perceive art and what we perceive to be art in different places. But this mirror might also reflect the viewer, especially if they are so captured by Barba’s glamorously dramatized spectacle that the appropriated old masters become merely a stage. Or just maybe they read Barba’s works for what they are, art and collaged spectacle colluding against the art market’s “scene” culture.


Lluís Barba received his training at the Escola de Belles Arts de Barcelona. He is an internationally renowned artist with solo and group exhibitions in London, Brussels, New York, Miami, LA, Kuala Lumpur, Kuwait, and many other places around the world. His work has been included at the Venice Biennale and Havana Biennial in Cuba and is on display in museums such as the Centre Pompidou in Paris and the Museu d'Art Contemporani in Barcelona.


Stephan Reisner

VITA
Born in Barcelona
Studied at Escola Superior de Disseny i d’Arts Llotja and at Massana School Art Center, Barcelona
Lives and works in Barcelona
INTERVIEW
When did you become interested in art? How did it all begin?

I realized there were inequalities in society, related to race, economics, and class, which I felt the need to communicate through the medium I know best, art. I began to draft concepts such as:
Demystification - guns, atomic bombs, tanks, and uniformed military men with flowers eating ice cream.
Mass consumption - multinational brands.
Manipulation - political and religious Power.
Hunger – child exploitations and threats to poverty-stricken communities
I use bar codes in the form of tattoos to symbolize the loss of individual identity, homologation, conformity, and mass consumption.
I establish a parallelism between past and present.


How would you describe your work process?


My creative process is based on painting, drawing, photography, sculpture, video, and digital computer graphics. I photograph people in my studio, as well as people on the street: tourists, homeless people... in contrast with the world of glamour: celebrities... and culture: contemporary artists, their objects and works, architects, collectors, writers, philosophers, thinkers, visionaries...
I decontextualize elements from one reality and position them in another reality.
I use implicit messages in my work, such as globalization and cultural immersion.
I think I provide viewers with and element of reflection, a subjective interpretation of art. Using the technical and conceptual diversity of various historical masterpieces, I have managed to articulate my personal style and convey my interests without deviating from the discourse.


Who inspires you?


In general, I draw inspiration from the grand masters of the last centuries; without them we would not be capable of creating the art that is produced today:
Rembrandt -he introduced chiaroscuro, which is extremely valuable in both photography and cinema.
Leonardo -he created the foundations for what we now refer to as multimedia artists; if he were alive today, he would certainly be working with new technologies.
Duchamp -his contribution was the contextual detachment of figures, turning them into purely conceptual and artistic objects.
Mondrian – he helped us to understand balance and structure through his theory of mass, volume, color, etc.


Which artists/works of art are you particularly impressed with at the moment?


Artists of the contemporary arts: Paul McCarthy, Maurizio Cattelan, Matthew-Barney, Warhol, Vanessa Beecroft, Lichtenstein, Oldenburg, Bill Viola...
And from the past: Bosch, Brueghel, Leonardo da Vinci, Goya, Gustave Doré, Pierre Subleyras, Giovanni Paolo Panini, Hubert Robert, David Teniers, John Singer Sargent, Boilly...


What distinguishes a good work of art?


A work of art must have a subjective and distinctive view of the world around us, one that is as important to the artist as it is to the viewer. It must evoke discourse, as well as emotional, conceptual, and formal interest. I've always thought that if an artist has nothing to say or nothing to claim, it's best not to say anything.


What project are you working on at the moment?


I am in the process of reinterpreting Gustave Doré's engravings from The Divine Comedy.


What is the purpose of art?


I would be happy to see my work positively influencing society and encouraging people to reflect on many of the world’s problems.


Does art bring about happiness?

Of course. When I work, I enter my own world where the pleasure of creating and drafting new stories is all there is. If I could be reborn, I would like to be reborn as an artist.