Ακρυλικά χρώματα προς πώληση

2.120 Πρωτότυπες ζωγραφιές προς πώληση: Ποια είναι η προέλευση[...]

2.120 Πρωτότυπες ζωγραφιές προς πώληση:

Ποια είναι η προέλευση του Ακρυλικό τεχνική;

Τα ακρυλικά χρώματα χρησιμοποιούν παραδοσιακές χρωστικές αναμεμιγμένες με συνθετικές ρητίνες. Η χρήση ακρυλικής βαφής στην Τέχνη αναπτύχθηκε από το δεύτερο μισό του εικοστού αιώνα, που διαδόθηκε από καλλιτέχνες όπως ο Willem de Kooning, ο Kenneth Noland ή ο Mark Rothko που ήταν οι πρώτοι που χρησιμοποίησαν αυτό το υλικό στους καμβά τους. Ακρυλικό χρώμα που αποτελείται από χρωστικές ουσίες φυσικής ή τεχνητής προέλευσης με βάση ρητίνες και συνδετικά υλικά από πολυμερή, εκτιμάται ιδιαίτερα από τους σύγχρονους καλλιτέχνες λόγω των χαρακτηριστικών του: εύκολο να αραιωθεί, να εφαρμοστεί, ανώδυνο, ανθεκτικό και ανθεκτικό. Σε αντίθεση με το ελαιόχρωμα, το ακρυλικό χρώμα στεγνώνει γρήγορα και επιτρέπει πολλά εφέ λάμψης και υφής στα ζωγραφικά έργα των καλλιτεχνών. Αυτό εξηγεί γιατί τα ακρυλικά χρώματα είναι πιθανώς τα πιο συχνά χρησιμοποιούμενα σήμερα.

Πώς να ορίσετε το Εννοιολογική Τέχνη στυλ ;

What is meant by conceptual paintings?

Conceptual art, also called conceptualism, is art in which the idea or ideas behind the work are more important than the way it looks, how it works, or what it is made of. Some conceptual art pieces, which are sometimes called installations, can be made by anyone who can follow written instructions. The American artist Sol LeWitt's definition of conceptual art, which was one of the first to be published, was based on this method:

In conceptual art, the most important part of the work is the idea or concept behind it. When an artist uses a conceptual style, it means that all of the planning and decisions have been made ahead of time, and the work itself is just a formality. The idea turns into a machine that creates art.

Tony Godfrey, who wrote Conceptual Art (Art & Ideas) in 1998, says that conceptual art questions what art is. This is something that Joseph Kosuth turned into a definition of art in his early manifesto for conceptual art, Art after Philosophy (1969). In the 1950s, the important art critic Clement Greenberg had a strong view of Modern art that included the idea that art should look at itself.

With the rise of language-based art in the 1960s, however, conceptual artists like Art & Language, Joseph Kosuth (who later became the American editor of Art-Language), and Lawrence Weiner began to look at art in a much more radical way than had been possible before (see below). One of the first and most important things they questioned was the idea that an artist's job was to make certain kinds of things.

Because of its association with the Young British Artists and the Turner Prize in the 1990s, "conceptual art" has come to mean all modern art that doesn't use the traditional skills of painting and sculpture. This is especially true in the UK. The fact that the term "conceptual art" is hard to define is one of the reasons why it is now used to describe things that have nothing to do with its original goals and styles. 

As the artist Mel Bochner said in 1970 when he talked about why he doesn't like the word "conceptual," it's not always clear what "concept" means, and it could be mistaken for "intention." So, when describing or defining a piece of art as "conceptual," it's important not to mix up what is meant by "conceptual" with the "intention" of the artist.


Conceptual paintings: what is the origin of the term?

Henry Flynt, an artist and philosopher, came up with the term "concept art" in 1961. He did this in an article with the same name that was published in the proto-Fluxus book An Anthology of Chance Operations. He said that Flynt's concept art came from his idea of "cognitive nihilism," in which logical paradoxes are shown to empty ideas of meaning. 

Concept art was meant to replace both mathematics and the formalistic music that was popular at the time in serious art music circles. It did this by using the syntax of logic and mathematics. So, Flynt said that for a piece to be called "concept art," it had to be a critique of logic or mathematics that used a linguistic idea as its material. This is something that later "conceptual art" doesn't have.

When Joseph Kosuth and the English Art and Language group used the term, it had a different meaning. They ditched the traditional art object in favor of a documented critical inquiry into the artist's social, philosophical, and psychological status, which began in Art-Language: The Journal of Conceptual Art in 1969. 

By the middle of the 1970s, they had done this through books, indices, performances, texts, and paintings. In 1970, Conceptual Art and Conceptual Aspects was held at the New York Cultural Center. It was the first show that was all about conceptual art. 


Who were the precursors of conceptual painting?

The French artist Marcel Duchamp helped pave the way for the conceptualists by making works like the readymades that were good examples of conceptual art. The most famous of Duchamp's readymades was Fountain (1917), a standard urinal basin that the artist signed with the pseudonym "R. Mutt" and sent to the Society of Independent Artists in New York for their annual, unjudged show (which rejected it).

In the art world, a common object like a urinal is not considered art because it was not made by an artist or with the intention of being art. It is also not unique or hand-made. Later, US artist Joseph Kosuth wrote in his 1969 essay Art after Philosophy: "All art (after Duchamp) is conceptual (in nature) because art only exists conceptually." He was referring to how important Duchamp's ideas were for future "conceptualists."

Isidore Isou, who started the Lettrism movement in 1956, came up with the idea of a work of art that, by its very nature, could never be made in real life, but could still be appreciated aesthetically by thinking about it. 

This idea, which is also called "Art esthapériste" or "infinite-aesthetics," comes from Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz's "infinitesimals," which are amounts that could not exist except in ideas. Excoordism, the current form of the Isouian movement (as of 2013), calls itself the art of the infinitely large and the infinitely small.


What are the key concepts of conceptual painting?

Conceptual art became a movement in the 1960s, in part as a reaction against formalism, as explained at the time by Clement Greenberg, an important New York art critic. Greenberg said that modern art went through a process of getting smaller and more refined, with the goal of defining the formal, essential nature of each medium. Those things that went against this nature had to be cut back. 

For example, the goal of painting was to figure out exactly what a painting is: what makes it a painting and nothing else. As it is the nature of paintings to be flat canvases on which colored pigments are painted, things like figures, the illusion of three-dimensional space, and references to things outside the painting were all found to be unnecessary and should be taken away.

Some have said that conceptual art continued this "dematerialization" of art by getting rid of the need for objects altogether, while others, including many of the artists themselves, saw conceptual art as a radical break with Greenberg's kind of formalist Modernism. Later artists still liked art that was self-critical and didn't like art that was just an illusion. But by the end of the 1960s, it was clear that Greenberg's rules that art should stay within the limits of each medium and not be about things outside of art no longer held water.

Conceptual art was also a reaction against art being turned into a commodity. It tried to subvert the gallery or museum as the place and judge of art and the art market as the owner and seller of art. Lawrence Weiner said: "When you know about one of my works, you have it. I can't just get inside someone's head and take it out." Because of this, many conceptual artists' work can only be understood through the documentation that comes with it, such as photographs, written texts, or objects on display, which some might argue are not the art in and of themselves. 

It is sometimes reduced (as in the work of Robert Barry, Yoko Ono, and Weiner himself) to a set of written instructions that describe a work but don't tell how to make it, putting the focus on the idea rather than the thing itself. This shows a clear preference for the "art" side of the supposed divide between art and craft, since art, unlike craft, takes place in and engages with historical discourse. For example, Ono's "written instructions" make more sense in the context of other conceptual art from the same time.


What is the importance of language in conceptual painting?

The first wave of conceptual artists in the 1960s and early 1970s were very interested in language. Text has been used in art for a long time, but it wasn't until the 1960s that artists like Lawrence Weiner, Edward Ruscha, Joseph Kosuth, Robert Barry, and Art & Language started making art with only words. Before, language was just one kind of visual element among many, and it was secondary to the overall composition (like in Synthetic Cubism). 

The conceptual artists, on the other hand, used language instead of paintbrushes and canvases and let it mean something on its own. Anne Rorimer says this about Lawrence Weiner's works: "The thematic content of each work comes only from the meaning of the language used, while the way the work is presented and where it is placed in context play important but separate roles."

Peter Osborne, a British philosopher and theorist of conceptual art, says that the turn to linguistic theories of meaning in both Anglo-American analytic philosophy and Continental structuralist and poststructuralist philosophy in the middle of the 20th century was a key factor in conceptualism. This change in language "reinforced and legitimized" the direction the conceptual artists went. 

Osborne also says that the first generation of conceptualists was the first group of artists to get a degree in art from a university. In a public lecture at the Fondazione Antonio Ratti, Villa Sucota in Como, Italy, on July 9, 2010, Osborne said that contemporary art is "post-conceptual." It's a claim about what the work of art is and what it means (rather than say at the descriptive level of style or movement).

Edward A. Shanken, an American art historian, says that Roy Ascott "powerfully demonstrates the significant intersections between conceptual art and art-and-technology, exploding the traditional autonomy of these art-historical categories." Ascott is the British artist who is most closely linked to cybernetic art in England. However, he was not included in Cybernetic Serendipity because his cybernetic work was mostly conceptual and did not use technology directly. 

"The Construction of Change," Ascott's 1964 essay on the use of cybernetics in art and art education, was quoted on the dedication page (to Sol LeWitt) of Lucy R. Lippard's seminal Six Years: The Dematerialization of the Art Object from 1966 to 1972. However, Ascott's contribution to the development of conceptual art in Britain has received little attention, perhaps (and ironically) because his work was too closely tied to art-and-teaching. 

Ascott's use of the thesaurus in 1963's telematic connections: timeline, which drew a clear parallel between the taxonomic qualities of spoken and visual languages, was another important intersection. This idea would later be used in Joseph Kosuth's Second Investigation, Proposition 1 (1968) and Mel Ramsden's Elements of an Incomplete Map (1968).


What are the concepts, style and trends of conceptual painting?

Conceptual art was meant to be a movement that broke down traditional barriers. Because of this, it can be hard to tell self-conscious Conceptualism apart from other art movements of the 1960s. Conceptualism could look like things like happenings, performance art, installations, body art, and art made from the earth. 

The main idea behind all of these changes was the rejection of traditional ways of judging art, the rejection of art as a commodity, and the belief that all art is based on ideas. Conceptual art avoids aesthetics, so it's hard to say what it looks like other than that it seems objective and not emotional. Even though a conceptual work may not have a specific style, you could say that its everyday look and wide range of expression are typical of the movement.

Joseph Kosuth was one of the first people to take the idea of idea-based art to its logical conclusion. He created a very analytical model based on the idea that art must always question its own purpose. Kosuth's most famous piece of writing about his ideas was a three-part essay from 1969 called "Art after Philosophy." 

In it, he argued that traditional media had to be left behind if self-criticism was to be pursued. He questioned the idea that art had to be made visible, or even that it had to be made in any physical form. Many people, like Lawrence Weiner, said that they needed to stop making physical works of art. Artists tried to get rid of aesthetic criteria and the idea that art was a commodity by trying to make art less material. 

In her history of Conceptualism, Six Years: The Dematerialization of the Art Object, art critic Lucy Lippard called this trend the "dematerialization of art object." This had a subtle political undertone. Conceptual art ideas often evoked dispersion (instead of formation) and voiding (instead of creation), and many of them were open-ended and didn't have a clear ending. For example, Lawrence Weiner's "Statements" from 1968 say things like "A field created by structured simultaneous TNT explosions" and "One standard dye marker thrown into the sea," which show how open-ended and, therefore, anti-authoritarian the movement was. Wiener wrote in his 1968-1969 book "Declaration of Intent" that "art that imposes conditions - human or otherwise - on the receiver in order for them to appreciate it is aesthetic fascism in my view."

Even though using text in art wasn't new by the 1960s (Cubist paintings, for example, include text along with other visual elements), artists like Lawrence Weiner, Joseph Kosuth, Ed Ruscha, and John Baldessari made text the main part of a visual work of art. Unlike their parents, this generation had gone to college, which explains in part their intelligence and the effect that recent studies in linguistics had on them.

The language was used to show something about itself and about art. Text-based art would often use abstract phrases, like abrupt commands, ambiguous statements, or just a single word, to make the viewer think of something. First-wave conceptualists like Weiner and Baldessari are still making art today. They influenced younger artists like Jenny Holzer and Tracey Emin to keep making language-based art and to push the limits of what art is and what it means.

If there was one thing that all Conceptual artists agreed on, it was that they didn't like how the art world was set up as an institution that decided what was "good" and "bad" art. Since the middle of the 19th century, the people in charge of deciding what is "good" art and what is "bad" art have been mostly influenced by the market. The people who benefited from this system were a small group of (mostly male and white) artists and people from an elite social class who bought and sold the art or helped run museums.

In the 1960s, people thought that if art was made for this world, it wouldn't try to change anything or be avant-garde. During the 1960s and early 1970s, conceptual artists and theorists looked closely at modern art practices and trends, looking for radical theories or styles. However, they mostly found abstract, post-abstract, and minimalist themes. "Burn wrote in Artforum in 1975, "What can you expect to challenge in the real world with "color," "edge," "process," "systems," "modules," etc. as your arguments?" If these are your "professional" arguments, how are you anything more than a puppet?"

In the late 1960s, artists like Hans Haacke, Michael Asher, Daniel Buren, and Marcel Broodthaers started using a form of Conceptualism that is now called "institutional critique." Institutional critique continued the tradition of idea-based art, but it usually took the form of installations that implicitly questioned the assumed function of the museum, which was to keep and show off masterpieces, by showing what its role was in society as a whole (eg. as arbiter of taste, as investor, as tax shelter, and gatekeeper to artistic success).

The museum is not a neutral place where art can be shown and people can learn. Instead, it puts its money into promoting certain artists, picking "important" works of art, and changing the economy in ways that help its trustees and the established art world. Institutional critique is hard to understand because it was often done inside the institutions that artists were criticizing, like Hans Haacke's MoMA Poll (1970). 

Sometimes, the success of a work depended on the audience's participation. This shows that the work, like the "art world," is made up of viewers, artists, and the institutions that host them. So, it's important to remember that these artists didn't just reject or negate the institution. Instead, they were often a part of it and tried to show how complicated social and institutional relationships are.

When Marcel Duchamp called a urinal a work of art and re-released his Readymades in later editions, he gave a clear blow to the West's idea of what art is. In "Paragraphs on Conceptual Art," Sol LeWitt supported the idea that an artist's work doesn't have to be fully "authored" by the artist. "When an artist uses a conceptual style, it means that all of the planning and decisions have been made ahead of time, and the execution is just a formality.

The idea turns into a machine that makes art." Conceptualism as a whole is characterized by this idea of an automated or machine-like way of making art. In Vito Acconci's 1969 work "Following Piece," for example, the artist let an outside force affect his vision by following the random movements of strangers on the street until they went into private space. 

Acconci decided in advance what the work would be about, what its goal would be, and how it would be documented. However, the work's path and subjects (the exact people, number of photographs, specific locations, etc.) were decided by random people and were not under Acconci's control.

This denial of the artist as "master" and sole creator of the work also applies to many works made after the artist's death, even though he or she did not make them. LeWitt, who died in 2007, left behind a number of sketches for sculptures and other works of art that were never made. Teams of fabricators and assistants still use these sketches to make new LeWitt works even though the artist is dead. 

This kind of lying in the name of an artist is similar to other modern art practices, especially in sculpture (the estate of Auguste Rodin is a well-known example of posthumous artistic production). Even though LeWitt's works that were published after he died technically had an author, this goes against traditional ideas of craft and mastery.


What about artistic skills in conceptual paintings?

By only using language, Weiner, Barry, Wilson, Kosuth, and Art & Language were able to get rid of the signs of authorship that came from formal invention and the way materials were used. 

Conceptual art is different from more "traditional" forms of art in a big way that has to do with how skilled the artist is. Even though traditional media skills don't matter much in conceptual art, it's hard to say that you don't need any skills to make conceptual works or that skill is always missing from them. 

John Baldessari, for example, has shown realist pictures that he had professional sign-writers paint, and many conceptual performance artists (like Stelarc and Marina Abramovic) are very good at what they do and know how to move their own bodies in interesting ways. Conceptual art isn't so much defined by a lack of skill or dislike of tradition as it is by a clear lack of respect for modern ideas of authorial presence and individual artistic expression.


What about contemporary influences?

Modernism, like the work of Manet (1832–1883) and Marcel Duchamp after him, is where proto-conceptualism got its start (1887–1968). The first wave of "conceptual art" happened between about 1967[22] and 1978. Early "concept" artists like Henry Flynt (born in 1940), Robert Morris (born in 1931 and died in 2018), and Ray Johnson (born in 1927 and died in 1995) had an effect on the later, well-known movement of conceptual art. 

Conceptual artists like Dan Graham, Hans Haacke, and Lawrence Weiner have had a big impact on later artists. Well-known contemporary artists like Mike Kelley or Tracey Emin are sometimes called "second- or third-generation" conceptualists, or "post-conceptual" artists (the prefix Post- in art can frequently be interpreted as "because of").

Many of the concerns of the conceptual art movement have been taken up by modern artists, whether or not they call themselves "conceptual artists." Ideas like anti-commodification, social and/or political critique, and ideas/information as medium are still a part of contemporary art, especially among artists who work with.

Even though the model of Conceptual art that Joseph Kosuth and Art & Language promoted might be seen as the movement's pinnacle, others explored other paths that were arguably just as important. Conceptual art didn't follow the rules of craftsmanship and style so much that you could say it put the focus back on content, which had been pushed to the side because of the critical focus on form. 

Conceptualism came about during a time of major social change, and its main idea, that the idea is most important, was used by many artists to bring attention to different social issues. Hans Haacke, Martha Rosler, Jenny Holzer, Luis Caminzer, Alfredo Jaar, and Ai Weiwei are just some of the international artists who talk about labor and gender relations, how museums are run, poverty, and censorship.

Even though the movement often focused on how society shapes art, it was not popular and didn't get much attention outside of the art world because it was hard to understand. Also, by the middle of the 1970s, cracks were starting to appear in the movement, which led to its end. Still, it eventually influenced post-Conceptual artists, many of whom embraced the material basis of art and the language of visual culture. 

Cindy Sherman and Richard Prince, who led the Pictures Generation, were two of these artists. Others kept avoiding traditional art making by doing performance art or making installations. So, many of its ideas and some of its strict style and methods live on in the work of artists like Andrea Fraser, Tino Sehgal, Gabriel Orozco, Rirkrit Tiravanija, Glen Ligon, and Damien Hirst.


Who are the most important conceptual artists?

Joseph Kosuth (Toledo, January 31, 1945)

Joseph Kosuth is an artist from the U.S. Conceptual artist Joseph Kosuth went to the School of Visual Arts in New York to study fine arts. Most of his works try to figure out what art is by focusing on ideas on the edges of art. He doesn't make works just to make works. His art often talks about himself. One and Three Chairs is one of his most well-known pieces. It is a visual representation of Plato's idea of "form." One and Three Chairs shows a chair, a picture of that chair, and the definition of the word "chair" in a dictionary. The chair on the floor in the foreground of the photo is shown in the photograph. The definition, which is on the same wall as the picture, explains what a chair is in the different ways the word can be used. In this and other works by Kosuth, like Five Words in Blue Neon and Glass One and Three, he makes statements that are the same as what they say they are. His works with neon are also very important. He started using neon because he was interested in materials for signs and wanted to make a reference to the advertising world. Ex libris (1990) was a famous series of neon compositions with short quotes from well-known writers that were put up in public places in cities. In addition to being an artist, he has written many books about art and artists. One of these, The Artist as Anthropologist, is a good example. In his 1969 essay "Art after Philosophy," he said that art is a continuation of philosophy, which he thought had run its course. Like the Situationists, he didn't like formalisms as ways to express art. "Four Answers to Four Questions" is the name of an interview with Joseph Kosuth that was published in No. 9 of Agalma magazine in March 2005. It was edited by Roberto Terrosi.


John Anthony Baldessari (1931 – 2020)

John Anthony Baldessari was an American architect, performance artist, and conceptual artist. He was born in National City on June 17, 1931, and died in Los Angeles on January 2, 2020. He was the author of thousands of works that showed and, in many cases, combined the ability of images to tell stories and the ability of words to make connections. More than 200 exhibitions in the U.S. and Europe have shown his work.


On Kawara (1932 – 2014)

Conceptual art was developed by the Japanese artist On Kawara. In 1966, Kawara started a series of paintings called Today. They were all one color, and the only thing added to them was the date they were made. Most of the works were put in boxes that were made by hand, and a piece of the day's newspaper was attached to each one. If the artist didn't finish the piece by midnight, he would throw it away. Around the 1970s, he started making conceptual works in the same style, but they were in the form of a telegram and used simple, everyday phrases.


Robert Barry (1936)

American artist Robert Barry is from the U.S. Since the 1960s, he has been in important shows of conceptual art. Installations or performances make up his work. In 1969, he put together an exhibition for which the gallery was closed for the duration of the show. Barry spends his later years making works that are mostly about words. He took part in Documenta 5 in Kassel in 1972.


What are some famous works of conceptual art?

Erased de Kooning Drawing by Robert Rauschenberg

In 1953, Robert Rauschenberg went to Willem de Kooning's loft and asked to completely erase one of de Kooning's drawings. Rauschenberg thought that for this idea to be a work of art, the work had to be someone else's and not his own. He thought that if he erased one of his own drawings, all he would have was a drawing that had been erased. Even though de Kooning didn't like the idea at first, he understood it and reluctantly agreed to give up something that he would miss and that would be hard to completely erase, making the erasure that much more powerful in the end. Rauschenberg "finished" the work after about a month and about fifteen erasers. Rauschenberg once said, "It's not a denial, it's a celebration, it's just the idea!" Of course, it also meant the end of Abstract Expressionist art and the idea that art should be emotional. The missing drawing was a Conceptual work before the term was even invented. It was also a precursor to joke pieces like Sol Lewitt's Buried Cube Containing an Object of Importance but Little Value (1968), in which Lewitt supposedly buried a simple cube in a collector's yard, burying the object-centered approach of Minimalism along with it.


One and Three Chairs by: Joseph Kosuth

Between a scale photo of a chair and a written definition of the word "chair" is a real chair. One and Three Chairs is a great example of conceptual art. It makes people wonder what a "chair" is: the physical object, the idea, the photograph, or a combination of all three. Joseph Kosuth wrote in the past, "I call the art I make "conceptual" because it makes me think about what art is. So, it's a way of thinking about what the word "art" means in all of its forms." One and Three Chairs denies that an object and a representation are on different levels. It also suggests that a conceptual work of art can be both an object and a representation in different ways. This work goes back to René Magritte's 1928-1929 book Treachery of Images, which has a picture of a pipe with the words "Ceci n'est pas un pipe" written over it. It also goes beyond what Magritte said about the supposed priority of object over representation (This is not a pipe).


Vertical Earth Kilometer by Walter de Maria

The idea behind this piece was to make a real work of art that could not be seen. With the help of an industrial drill, de Maria dug a narrow hole exactly one kilometer deep in the ground. He then put a brass rod with a diameter of two inches and a length of one kilometer into the hole and covered it with a sandstone plate. A small hole was cut in the middle of the plate to show a small piece of the rod, which is level with the ground. The result is a permanent piece of art that people have to imagine but may never get to see in person. As a companion piece to Vertical Earth Kilometer, de Maria made Broken Kilometer (1979), which was much more visible. It was made of 500 two-meter-long brass rods that were neatly arranged in five rows of 100 rods each on an exhibition floor. In the same way that conceptual artists don't use traditional materials or care about how things look, this piece can't be sold or shown in its entirety. Also, it is not very expressive because it is simple and mostly hidden. This is in line with the period's many paradoxical negations of the visual in "visual art."


Grapefruit by Yoko Ono

Grapefruit, a book by Yoko Ono that has a plain cover and an odd name, was first published in 1964. It is an important early example of both Conceptual art and the link between it and Fluxus. Even though the work is technically an object, the art goes beyond its physical limitations because it contains a series of "event scores," which are different instructions that readers can follow if they want to. Grapefruit is a kind of user's manual in the Fluxus style. It has about 150 sets of instructions divided into five sections: Music, Painting, Event, Poetry, and Object. Its point of view is similar to that of Joseph Beuys, who said, "Every human being is an artist." This book puts the importance of the physical object below that of the document or starting point for artistic practice. It also lets anyone do the works, which could lead to an infinite number of artworks that all come from the same source. As with other Conceptual works, though, it doesn't matter if the instructions are followed or not because what's most important is the idea behind the art.


Every Building on the Sunset Strip by Ed Ruscha

Ruscha put a camera on the back of a pick-up truck and drove back and forth along the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles, taking pictures from both sides of the street. The idea turns into a machine that creates art. The book was a big change from the usual artist's or photographer's book. It was expensively bound to show off the high-quality copies inside. Alfred Stieglitz and Edward Weston's work shows how much of the history of photography was spent trying to prove that it was an art form. Ruscha did not try to glorify the art of photography, as you might think from the way he abstracted his subjects through interesting cropping, careful editing, and strong light and dark contrasts. He does not talk about how good of a photographer he is. In fact, he took the pictures at noon under harsh lighting that made them look like they were taken by a beginner. He also didn't try to make the picture look good, but instead used the "strip" like a ready-made shape that his artistic decisions had to fit into. He doesn't agree with the idea that art should be an expression of a unique artistic vision or personality, like many people of his generation. Ruscha's "deadpan" document is typical of the anti-expressionist attitude that can be seen in a lot of art photography from the 1960s to the present, such as the work of Bernd and Hilla Becher, Thomas Struth, and Rineke Dijkstra. A big difference between photo-conceptualist work and many other examples of what has come to be called "deadpan photography" is that photo-conceptualist work is documentary, or at least seems to be, and puts the idea ahead of showing off good photography skills.


Museum of Modern Art, Department of Eagles, Financial Section by Marcel Broodthaers

Marcel Broodthaers, a Belgian artist, opened the Museum of Modern Art, Department of Eagles in 1968. It was a temporary, conceptual museum that would show up as installations in "sections" at different times and places between 1968 and 1971. In 1970–71, Broodthaers declared the Museum bankrupt. He did this to bring attention to how cultural institutions make money, and he made a Financial Section to try to raise money by selling specially cast gold bars, or ingot. Broodthaers stamped each shiny bar with an eagle, a symbol of power and victory that he had looked at in a previous version of his Museum. He then set the price of each bar at double the market value of gold, moving it from one market (commodities) to another (art) (art). The bars were worth a lot because they were art, which is both a thing and an investment. The fact that the gold bar's value went up shows that the value of gold and other commodities is based on speculation and the market. As Duchamp had shown before with his Readymades, art is anything that an artist chooses or nominates as art and that the artistic establishment, which includes the art market, accepts as art. Broodthaers shows this very clearly by "turning" the gold into art by putting it in a fake museum. By buying the Broodthaers ingot, the buyer would help prove that it was a legitimate piece of art and not just gold. Broodthaers, the artist, curator, and museum director, would sign off on the artwork (the ingot) and send a letter of authenticity to the buyer. Due largely to the Museum series, Broodthaers is known as an artist who does "institutional critique," but it's important to remember that this isn't just a way of saying that the art world doesn't matter. Instead, it shows over and over, often through subtle parody, how the artist, the work of art, and the institutions that show and promote them all depend on each other.


MoMA Poll by Hans Haacke

For the Museum of Modern Art's 1970 exhibition Information, Haacke conceived of a questionnaire in which museum visitors would be invited to vote on a current sociopolitical issue and submit their answers via written ballot, and deposited in one of two transparent boxes, allowing people to approximate the quantity of submissions. The poll asked, "Would the fact that Governor Rockefeller hasn't criticized President Nixon's Indochina Policy be a reason for you not to vote for him in November?" This question, which was not told to the museum before the show opened, went to the heart of MoMA as an institution, since Governor Rockefeller was a major donor to the museum and a board member. There were clearly twice as many "YES" votes as "NO" votes, which is even more surprising given where and why the poll was held. Haacke's MoMA Poll is a key early example of the politically motivated critique of institutions in Conceptual art, and it is by no means a fair poll. The artist set the work in motion, but he or she didn't know how it would end; the audience did. In this way, Haacke shows that making a work of art is not just up to the artist. All works of art can only be called works of art if everyone agrees they are (a museum purchases a work and validates it, a collector collects it, a publisher makes it "art" by promoting it as such in a magazine or a book about art.) This piece shows that the artist thinks that making art is a group effort, not an individual one.


Imponderabilia by Marina Abramovic

For Imponderabilia, Marina Abramovic and her longtime partner Ulay stand naked next to each other at the entrance of the museum. They face each other and are completely naked, so people have to turn and squeeze through their bodies to get in. Even though the piece is obviously meant to draw attention to the nakedness of the performers, the real idea is to see how the public reacts to the nakedness, where the performers are placed, and, most importantly, how each visitor chooses to enter. Do they look shy or embarrassed as they walk in? Do they choose to pass through facing Abramovic or Ulay? Do they even choose to go into the museum? Abramovic and Ulay carry out their idea in the most emotionless way possible. This lets the viewers express themselves, which is usually seen as an artistic goal. The photos and videos of the performance are kind of like a study of how people act when they are faced with something really strange or even stressful. Their work shows the similarities between Performance art and Conceptual art, which are usually thought of as separate movements. However, it is different from a lot of Conceptual art because it constantly refers to the body, to risk, and to the tension between the artists' clinical disinterest and the possibility of a strong emotional response to the work.


Two Correlated Rotations by Dan Graham

In the mid-1960s, Dan Graham started to play around with moving images and 360-degree topographical orientation. For Two Correlated Rotations, he came up with a very complicated exercise for two performers. Graham says that this piece "relates perception to the perception of motion and to the perception of depth and time." One performer (Graham) stood inside a circle or enclosed space, and another stood outside. Both Graham and the other performer moved around in a circle, taking pictures of each other as they went. The resulting 8-mm film, Two Correlated Rotations, put viewers in the photographer's mind while making them feel disoriented by moving the camera's eye in different 360-degree rotations. The double-synchronized films, which are shown as a single piece, and the photographic documents draw attention to a task that was done in a certain way but resulted in very different visual representations of that artistic idea. The process of making the movie is "mirrored" by each camera, which is a modernist tradition. Conceptualism uses a lot of different kinds of art. For example, the project is a film about how it was made, but it is clear that it also used live performance and a lot of still images and diagrams to show the artist's idea.


What are some famous books on conceptual art?

Alexander Alberro and Sabeth Buchmann, Art After Conceptual Art. The MIT Press: 2006.

Peter Goldie and Elisabeth Schellekens, Who’s Afraid: of Conceptual Art? Routledge: 2009.

Tony Godfrey, Conceptual Art A&I (Art and Ideas). Phaidon: 1998.

Peter Goldie and Elisabeth Schellekens, Philosophy and Conceptual Art. Clarendon Press: 2007.

Alexander Alberro and Blake Stimson, Conceptual Art: A Critical Anthology. The MIT Press: 2000.

Nathalie Zonnenberg, Conceptual Art in a Curatorial Perspective: Between Dematerialization and Documentation. Valiz/Vis-à-vis: 2019.

Ψάχνετε για Αυθεντικοί πίνακες για πώληση ;

Εξερευνήστε όλα τα στυλ και όλες τις τεχνικές ζωγραφικής: σύγχρονα έργα ζωγραφικής, τέχνη του δρόμου, αφηρημένη τέχνη, εικαστική τέχνη, τοπία, πορτρέτα, νεκρές φύσεις, γυμνά, ακουαρέλα, ελαιογραφία, ακρυλική ζωγραφική… Το Artmajeur είναι για όλους καλλιτεχνικές ευαισθησίες και γιορτάζει την ομορφιά από την πλευρά σας για 20 χρόνια με περισσότερα από 2 εκατομμύρια σύγχρονα έργα τέχνης για να ανακαλύψετε ... ή να αποκτήσετε! Το παγκόσμιο σημείο αναφοράς για τους σύγχρονους πίνακες. Ανακαλύψτε έργα σύγχρονων καλλιτεχνών από όλο τον κόσμο για να διακοσμήσετε το εσωτερικό σας με τάξη! Απλός εραστής τέχνης ή επιβεβαιωμένος συλλέκτης; Βρείτε τον αγαπημένο καμβά ή τη ζωγραφική που θα ενισχύσει πραγματικά τη διακόσμηση σας. Το Artmajeur σας προσφέρει πρωτότυπα έργα, περιορισμένες εκδόσεις και εκτυπώσεις από τους καλύτερους σύγχρονους καλλιτέχνες στον κόσμο. Στο Artmajeur, οι πίνακες επιλέγονται από ενθουσιώδεις και ειδικούς στην αγορά τέχνης. Επιλέγουμε για εσάς τα πρωτότυπα έργα μοντέρνων, βραβευμένων και αναγνωρισμένων ζωγράφων, καθώς και νέες αυξανόμενες αξίες στον τομέα της σύγχρονης τέχνης για να σας καθοδηγήσουμε και να σας βοηθήσουμε στη διαδικασία αγοράς ζωγραφικής στο διαδίκτυο.

Πώς να αγοράσετε μια ακρυλική ζωγραφική σε απευθείας σύνδεση;


Η αγορά ενός ακρυλικού πίνακα για πρώτη φορά στο διαδίκτυο μπορεί μερικές φορές να είναι μια αποθαρρυντική εργασία, καθώς υπάρχουν τόσοι πολλοί με τόσες πολλές αποχρώσεις, εκδόσεις και τύπους για να διαλέξετε. Για το πολύ οπτικό άτομο, αυτό μπορεί συχνά να είναι συντριπτικό και συχνά είναι δύσκολο να γνωρίζουμε αν πράγματι παίρνετε μια καλή απόφαση αγοράς. Αυτό το άρθρο θα σας καθοδηγήσει με μερικές από τις βασικές ερωτήσεις που πρέπει να κάνετε και μερικά από τα πράγματα που πρέπει να λάβετε υπόψη πριν κάνετε την αγορά.

Οι διαδικτυακές αγορές έχουν γίνει ο κανόνας για τους περισσότερους ανθρώπους. Όλοι αγαπάμε την ευκολία να μπορούμε να αγοράσουμε οτιδήποτε από τον καναπέ μας πίνοντας ένα φλιτζάνι καφέ. Αλλά, τι γίνεται όταν θέλεις κάτι συγκεκριμένο; Τι θα συνέβαινε αν ήθελες πραγματικά να αγοράσεις έναν ακρυλικό πίνακα και δεν ήξερες από πού να ξεκινήσεις; Εκεί μπαίνουμε! Με το ηλεκτρονικό μας κατάστημα, artmajeur.com, μπορείτε να αναζητήσετε ανά μέγεθος ή στυλ και να βρείτε το τέλειο κομμάτι σας. Και με τη δωρεάν αποστολή παγκοσμίως, είναι πιο εύκολο από ποτέ να αποσταλεί αυτό το ειδικό δώρο απευθείας στο γραμματοκιβώτιο κάποιου!


Σχεδιάζετε να πλαισιώσετε τον πίνακα ή να τον κρεμάσετε στον τοίχο σας απλώς τεντωμένος και τοποθετημένος σε ξύλο; Εάν σκοπεύετε να εμφανίσετε το έργο του καμβά σας, τότε θα πρέπει να βεβαιωθείτε ότι το μέγεθος του τεμαχίου και η διάσταση του πλαισίου είναι κατάλληλα.


Τι είδους ακρυλικούς πίνακες θέλετε να εμφανίζετε στον τοίχο σας;

Σας ενδιαφέρει μια πιο μοντέρνα εμφάνιση με ζωντανά χρώματα ή μια πιο παραδοσιακή εμφάνιση με πιο απαλά χρώματα;

Όλα αυτά είναι υπέροχα ερωτήματα και μπορούν να σας βοηθήσουν να περιορίσετε τις επιλογές σας καθώς και να κάνετε την απόφαση ευκολότερη.

Μπορείτε να επιλέξετε από

  • ακρυλικά χρώματα
  • λαδομπογιές
  • βαφές νερού
  • και πολλά άλλα είδη μέσων και το καθένα έχει τις δικές του μοναδικές ιδιότητες και χαρακτηριστικά.

Τώρα που γνωρίζετε τι είδους καμβά θέλετε να χρησιμοποιήσετε, μπορείτε να προχωρήσετε στην επόμενη πτυχή της αγοράς ενός έργου τέχνης τοίχου. Αυτό το επόμενο μέρος είναι αρκετά σημαντικό και περιλαμβάνει τη διασφάλιση ότι δεν θα σας ξεσκίσουν όταν πρόκειται για έναν ακρυλικό καμβά. Οι ακρυλικές ζωγραφιές είναι φτιαγμένες με συγκεκριμένη φόρμουλα, έτσι ώστε οι γκουάς των ακρυλικών να είναι ανθεκτικά μέσα και να αντιστέκονται σε φθορές. Αυτό σημαίνει ότι ακόμη και αν ο πίνακας καταστραφεί, μπορείτε ακόμα να τον επισκευάσετε εύκολα.


Είστε έτοιμοι να αγοράσετε έναν ακρυλικό πίνακα;

Βρίσκεστε στο σωστό μέρος στο artmajeur.com. Έχουμε μια τεράστια συλλογή ακρυλικών πινάκων προς πώληση και είμαστε έτοιμοι να σας βοηθήσουμε να βρείτε αυτό που χρειάζεστε - είτε πρόκειται για ένα πρωτότυπο μοντέρνο αφηρημένο είτε για εκτύπωση καλής τέχνης. Επικοινωνήστε μαζί μας για τις απαιτήσεις σας!

Αγοράστε ακρυλικούς πίνακες στο διαδίκτυο για να προσθέσετε μια μοναδική πινελιά στη διακόσμηση του σπιτιού σας. Εάν θέλετε να εξοικονομήσετε χρήματα για την αγορά σας, βεβαιωθείτε ότι έχετε ψωνίσει πρώτα, ώστε να γνωρίζετε ότι παίρνετε την απόλυτα καλύτερη δυνατή τιμή. Πρέπει να ελέγξετε τις διαφορετικές πολιτικές ιστότοπων.

Στο Artmajeur, μπορείτε να αγοράσετε έναν ακρυλικό πίνακα online μέσω μιας μεγάλης προσφοράς χιλιάδων έργων ζωγραφικής από καλλιτέχνες σε όλο τον κόσμο που είναι διαθέσιμοι στο απόθεμά μας, πράγμα που σημαίνει ότι υπάρχει κάτι για όλους εδώ. Είτε ψάχνετε για αφηρημένη τέχνη, τοπία ή αστικό τοπίο - τα έχουμε όλα! Οι καλλιτέχνες μας περιλαμβάνουν επαγγελματίες και αναδυόμενους καλλιτέχνες στην αγορά σήμερα! Περιηγηθείτε στις συλλογές μας τώρα και φιλτράρετε τα αποτελέσματα για να βρείτε τον τέλειο πίνακα για τον εαυτό σας ή ως δώρο σήμερα!

Η αγορά ενός πίνακα στο διαδίκτυο μπορεί να είναι δύσκολη. Μπορεί να μην γνωρίζετε πώς θα μοιάζει ο πίνακας ή αν θα σας αρέσει.

Γι 'αυτό δημιουργήσαμε αυτόν τον ιστότοπο για να παρέχουμε πίνακες υψηλής ποιότητας σε προσιτή τιμή με δωρεάν αποστολή και εύκολες επιστροφές. Προσφέρουμε επίσης 100% εγγύηση ικανοποίησης, ώστε να μην ανησυχείτε για τις αγορές από εμάς. Εάν για οποιονδήποτε λόγο δεν είστε ικανοποιημένοι με την αγορά σας, απλώς επιστρέψτε την εντός 30 ημερών και θα σας επιστρέψουμε τα χρήματά σας πλήρως!

Αν ψάχνετε για ένα όμορφο έργο τέχνης σε προσιτή τιμή, τότε δείτε τους ακρυλικούς πίνακές μας. Μπορείτε να βρείτε οποιοδήποτε μέγεθος εργασίας ή στυλ που θέλετε να ταιριάζει στις ανάγκες σας. Θα διαπιστώσετε ότι προσφέρουμε τις καλύτερες τιμές σε αυθεντικούς πίνακες ζωγραφικής στο διαδίκτυο!

Αν ψάχνετε να αγοράσετε έναν ακρυλικό πίνακα στο διαδίκτυο , βεβαιωθείτε ότι ο ιστότοπος είναι αξιόπιστος. Είναι επίσης σημαντικό να γνωρίζετε εάν η αγορά σας θα περιλαμβάνει έξοδα αποστολής για το περιτύλιγμα που καθορίζεται στην παραγγελία, τα έθιμα θα πληρώνονται από τον αγοραστή, οπότε δεν θα υπάρξουν εκπλήξεις όταν φτάσει στο κατώφλι σας. Ελπίζουμε ότι αυτός ο οδηγός σας βοήθησε να λάβετε μια τεκμηριωμένη απόφαση σχετικά με το ποιοι ακρυλικοί πίνακες είναι κατάλληλοι για εσάς!

Discover contemporary artworks on Artmajeur

Contemporary art is a vibrant constellation of artistic expressions. This creative universe encompasses a wide array of mediums, from paintings, sculpture, and photography to drawing, printmaking, textile art, and digital art, each medium a star shining with its own distinct radiance. Artists use diverse supports and materials to bring their visions to life, such as canvas, wood, metal, and even innovative digital canvases for the creation of virtual masterpieces

A contemporary painting, for instance, may weave its story through the masterful strokes of acrylic or oil, while a contemporary sculpture might sing its song in the language of stone, bronze, or found objects. The photographic arts capture and manipulate light to produce striking images, while printmaking employs techniques like lithography and screen-printing to produce multiples of a single, impactful image. Textile art plays with fabrics and fibers, whereas digital art pushes the boundaries of creation with innovative technology. 

The allure of contemporary art lies in its boundary-pushing nature, its relentless quest for experimentation and its constant reflection of the evolving human experience. This boundless creativity, coupled with its strong social and personal commentary, makes every piece of contemporary art a unique emblem of its time, a mirror held up to the realities and dreams of our complex world. It whispers to us, moves us, provokes thought, and kindles a deep emotional response, stirring the soul of anyone willing to listen. It is, indeed, the language of emotions and ideas, spoken in the dialect of our era.

Ζωγραφική,  24x20 in
The Ballerina Ζωγραφική, 24x20 in
©2024 Kristin Voss

Origins and history of contemporary art

The story of contemporary art unfolds in the mid-20th century, marked by seismic shifts in artistic expression. Post-World War II, around the 1950s and 1960s, artists began experimenting beyond traditional confines, challenging the norms of what art could be. This revolutionary epoch birthed myriad new movements and artistic forms such as abstract expressionism, pop art, and minimalism. Paintings, once confined by realism, embraced abstraction, as artists used color and form to express emotions and ideas. Notable periods like the advent of pop art in the late 1950s and early 1960s saw artworks mimicking popular culture and mass media, reflecting society’s shifting focus.

The sculptural arts, too, witnessed a metamorphosis. Sculptors started to experiment with new materials and forms, often creating artworks that interacted with the viewer and the surrounding space, fostering a sense of engagement. Drawing, a timeless practice, also evolved, with artists incorporating innovative techniques and concepts to redefine its role in contemporary art.

Photography, a relatively new medium, emerged as a powerful tool in the contemporary art landscape. Born in the 19th century, it truly came into its own in the latter half of the 20th century, blurring the lines between fine art and documentation. Printmaking, a practice dating back to ancient times, saw renewed interest and experimentation with techniques like lithography, etching, and screen printing gaining prominence.

The realm of textile art expanded dramatically, as artists began to appreciate the versatility and tactile quality of fabric and fibers. Artists began using textiles to challenge the boundaries between fine art, craft, and design. 

The dawn of digital technology in the late 20th century heralded a new age for contemporary art. Digital art emerged as artists started leveraging new technologies to create immersive, interactive experiences, often blurring the line between the virtual and the physical world.

Through these transformative periods, the essence of contemporary art has remained the same: a dynamic, evolving reflection of the times we live in, continually pushing boundaries and embracing the new, always questioning, always exploring.

Ζωγραφική,  21,7x24,8 in
Create Ζωγραφική, 21,7x24,8 in
©2024 Seven E

Evolutions of theses contemporary works in the art market

As we navigate through the 21st century, the dynamic landscape of contemporary art continues to evolve and expand, reflecting our ever-changing world. Contemporary paintings, once primarily confined to two-dimensional canvases, now embrace a multitude of forms and techniques, ranging from mixed media installations to digital creations, each piece a rich a weaving of thoughts, emotions, and narratives. Sculpture, too, has ventured far beyond traditional stone and bronze, with artists incorporating light, sound, and even motion, embodying the ephemerality and flux of the modern world.

Photography, in the hands of contemporary artists, has expanded its horizons, seamlessly blending with digital technology to create breathtaking imagery that challenges our perception of reality. Drawing, as well, has transcended the borders of paper, incorporating multimedia elements and exploratory techniques to redefine its role in the artistic discourse. Printmaking continues to flourish, with contemporary artists using traditional methods in innovative ways to deliver potent social and personal commentaries.

Textile art, once considered a craft, now holds a prominent place in the contemporary art world, with artists using it to explore issues of identity, tradition, and cultural heritage. Meanwhile, digital art, the newest member of the contemporary art family, has revolutionized the way we create and interact with art, presenting immersive experiences that blur the boundary between the virtual and the physical.

These diverse forms of contemporary art hold significant value in the current art market, not only due to their aesthetic appeal but also their ability to encapsulate and communicate complex ideas and emotions. Collectors, curators, and art lovers worldwide seek these works, drawn to their inherent dynamism, their innovative use of materials, and their eloquent expressions of our shared human experience. As a testimonial to our times, these contemporary artworks encapsulate the pulse of our society and the resonance of individual voices, forever etching our collective narrative into the annals of art history.

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Mag Blue, Friendship Ζωγραφική, 59,1x41,1 in
©2024 Mag Blue

Famous Contemporary Artists

As we delve into the vibrant realm of contemporary art, we encounter an array of artists who shape this dynamic field. Each a master in their medium - painting, sculpture, photography, drawing, printmaking, textile, or digital art - they push artistic boundaries, reflecting our era and challenging perceptions. Let’s explore these remarkable contributors and their groundbreaking works.

1. Gerhard Richter - Known for his multi-faceted approach to painting, Richter challenges the boundaries of the medium, masterfully oscillating between abstract and photorealistic styles. His works, whether featuring squeegee-pulled pigments or blurred photographic images, engage in a fascinating dialogue with perception.

2. Jeff Koons - A significant figure in contemporary sculpture, Koons crafts monumental pieces that explore themes of consumerism, taste, and popular culture. His iconic balloon animals, constructed in mirror-polished stainless steel, captivate with their playful yet profound commentary.

3. Cindy Sherman - An acclaimed photographer, Sherman uses her lens to explore identity and societal roles, particularly of women. Renowned for her conceptual self-portraits, she assumes myriad characters, pushing the boundaries of photography as a medium of artistic expression.

4. David Hockney - Hockney, with his prolific output spanning six decades, is a pivotal figure in contemporary drawing. His bold use of color and playful exploration of perspective convey an intoxicating sense of joy and an unabashed celebration of life.

5. Kiki Smith - An innovative printmaker, Smith’s work explores the human condition, particularly the female body and its social and cultural connotations. Her etchings and lithographs speak to universal experiences of life, death, and transformation.

6. El Anatsui - A master of textile art, Anatsui creates stunning tapestry-like installations from discarded bottle caps and aluminum scraps. These shimmering, flexible sculptures blend traditional African aesthetic with contemporary art sensibilities, speaking to themes of consumption, waste, and the interconnectedness of our world.

7. Rafael Lozano-Hemmer - A leading figure in digital art, Lozano-Hemmer utilizes technology to create interactive installations that blend architecture and performance art. His work, often participatory in nature, explores themes of surveillance, privacy, and the relationship between people and their environments.

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Frida's Youth Ζωγραφική, 14,6x13,8 in
©2024 Spiros

Notable contemporary artworks

The contemporary art landscape is a dynamic patchwork of diverse expressions and groundbreaking ideas, each artwork a unique dialog with its audience. Here are a selection of some renowned contemporary artworks, spanning various media such as painting, sculpture, photography, drawing, printmaking, textile art, and digital art, that have profoundly influenced this vibrant movement.

  1. "Cloud Gate" by Anish Kapoor, 2006 - This monumental stainless steel sculpture, also known as "The Bean," mirrors and distorts the Chicago skyline and onlookers in its seamless, liquid-like surface, creating an interactive experience that blurs the line between the artwork and the viewer.

  2. "Marilyn Diptych" by Andy Warhol, 1962 - An iconic piece of pop art, this silkscreen painting features fifty images of Marilyn Monroe. Half brightly colored, half in black and white, it reflects the dichotomy of celebrity life and its influence on popular culture.

  3. "Rhein II" by Andreas Gursky, 1999 - This photographic artwork, a digitally-altered image of the Rhine River, is celebrated for its minimalist aesthetic. It strips the landscape to its bare essentials, invoking a sense of tranquility and vastness.

  4. "Black Square" by Kazimir Malevich, 1915 - A revolutionary painting in the realm of abstract art, this piece, featuring nothing more than a black square on a white field, challenges traditional notions of representation, symbolizing a new era in artistic expression.

  5. "Puppy" by Jeff Koons, 1992 - This giant sculpture, a West Highland Terrier blanketed in flowering plants, explores themes of innocence, consumer culture, and the interplay between high art and kitsch. It’s a delightful blend of traditional sculpture and garden craft.

  6. "Re-projection: Hoerengracht" by Ed and Nancy Kienholz, 1983-1988 - A room-sized tableau representing Amsterdam’s red-light district, this work combines elements of sculpture, painting, lighting, and found objects. It engages viewers in a stark commentary on commodification and objectification.

  7. "Untitled" (Your body is a battleground) by Barbara Kruger, 1989 - This photomontage, combining black-and-white photography with impactful text, explores issues of feminism, identity, and power. Its potent, confrontational message is a prime example of the power of text in contemporary visual art.

  8. "For the Love of God" by Damien Hirst, 2007 - This sculpture, a platinum cast of a human skull encrusted with 8,601 diamonds, probes themes of mortality, value, and the human fascination with luxury and decadence. It’s a compelling blend of macabre and magnificence.

  9. "Physical impossibility of Death in the Mind of Someone Living" by Damien Hirst, 1991 - This artwork, featuring a tiger shark preserved in formaldehyde, blurs the line between traditional sculpture and biological specimen. It prompts viewers to contemplate mortality and nature’s ferocity.

  10. "One and Three Chairs" by Joseph Kosuth, 1965 - A piece of conceptual art, it presents a physical chair, a photograph of a chair, and a dictionary definition of a chair, thus exploring the relationship between language, picture, and referent in art.

These pieces, in their diversity, exemplify the rich tapestry of contemporary art, each piece a unique commentary on our world and a testament to the limitless potential of creative expression.


Το πιο σχετικό | Πιο πρόσφατα

Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "The Ballerina" από Kristin Voss, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
The Ballerina - Ζωγραφική, 24x20 in ©2024 από Kristin Voss - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Αγάπη, ballerina, champagne, toilet, bathroom, fast food, vogue, hot, woman

Kristin Voss

"The Ballerina"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 24x20 in

2.977 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Frida's Youth" από Spiros, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
Frida's Youth - Ζωγραφική, 14,6x13,8 in ©2024 από Spiros - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Πορτρέτα γυναικών

Spiros

"Frida's Youth"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 14,6x13,8 in

1.680 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Homeless burrow" από Irvin Grassi, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό Τοποθετήθηκε στο Ξύλινο φορείο σκελετό
Homeless burrow - Ζωγραφική, 15,8x15,8 in ©2021 από Irvin Grassi - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Αφηρημένη

Irvin Grassi

"Homeless burrow"

Ακρυλικό στο Λινό καμβά | 15,8x15,8 in

3.436,55 $
Διαθέσιμη Εκτύπωση
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Fateful  Holidays I…" από Elena Kotliarker, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
Fateful Holidays II. Rosh Hashanah - Ζωγραφική, 36,2x27,2 in ©2024 από Elena Kotliarker - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Θρησκεία, angel, angels, spirit, Jewish life, Judaica, Jewish heritage, spiritual art, Jerusalem, Israeli art, Hebrew, family gifts, gift for her, gift for him, Elena Kotliarker, Jewish symbolism, flowers, Jewish holiday, wedding gift, Chagall style, Hebrew words

Elena Kotliarker

"Fateful Holidays II. Rosh Hashanah"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 36,2x27,2 in

3.922 $
Διαθέσιμη Εκτύπωση
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "La Montaña Azul" από Jacqueline Schreier, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό Τοποθετήθηκε στο Ξύλινο πάνελ
La Montaña Azul - Ζωγραφική, 13,8x10,6 in ©2019 από Jacqueline Schreier - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Δέντρο, árbol, montaña, paisaje, noche, dorado, azul, negro, surrealismo, luz, Jacqueline Schreier, arte contemporáneo, pan de oro

Jacqueline Schreier

"La Montaña Azul"

Ακρυλικό στο Ξύλο | 13,8x10,6 in

1.643,9 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Los Cautivos" από Jesus Tejedor, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
Los Cautivos - Ζωγραφική, 78,7x196,9 in ©2024 από Jesus Tejedor - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Καθημερινή ζωή, dibujos preparativos, grupo escultórico, conexión y atadura, falsas perspectivas, sombras proyectadas, ligereza de las líneas

Jesus Tejedor

"Los Cautivos"

Ακρυλικό στο Χαρτί | 78,7x196,9 in

5.932,48 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Cheetah in the Rabb…" από Stacy Shpak, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
Cheetah in the Rabbit mask - Ζωγραφική, 21,7x13,8 in ©2022 από Stacy Shpak - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Ζώο, cheetah, pink background, metamodern, graffic

Stacy Shpak

"Cheetah in the Rabbit mask"

Ακρυλικό στο Ξύλο | 21,7x13,8 in

1.363,9 $
Διαθέσιμη Εκτύπωση
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Infraworld" από Ammy Amorette Spencer, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό Τοποθετήθηκε στο Ξύλινο φορείο σκ…
Infraworld - Ζωγραφική, 36x36 in ©2020 από Ammy Amorette Spencer - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Πολύχρωμα

Ammy Amorette Spencer

"Infraworld"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 36x36 in

5.011 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Contrary" από Masha Bright, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό Τοποθετήθηκε στο Ξύλινο φορείο σκελετό
Contrary - Ζωγραφική, 19,7x19,7 in ©2024 από Masha Bright - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Γεωμετρικός, mashabright, contemporaryartist, black, abstractart, abstractpainting

Masha Bright

"Contrary"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 19,7x19,7 in

812,65 $
539,22 $
Διαθέσιμη Εκτύπωση
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "No Royalties" από Jens Hartmann, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
No Royalties - Ζωγραφική, 39x39 in ©2010 από Jens Hartmann - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Pop Πολιτισμός

Jens Hartmann

"No Royalties"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 39x39 in

2.582 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "éclipse de soleil" από Alexandra Efimova, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
SafeSearch
éclipse de soleil - Ζωγραφική, 31,5x23,6 in ©2024 από Alexandra Efimova - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Ζώο

Alexandra Efimova

"éclipse de soleil"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 31,5x23,6 in

1.401,09 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Limite subjective g…" από Soliaski, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό Τοποθετήθηκε στο Ξύλινο φορείο σκελε…
Limite subjective géminée - Ζωγραφική, 31,5x27,6 in ©2024 από Soliaski - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Βιομηχανία, conceptuel, abstrait, industriel

Soliaski

"Limite subjective géminée"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 31,5x27,6 in

2.016,87 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Create" από Seven E, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
Create - Ζωγραφική, 21,7x24,8 in ©2024 από Seven E - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Αφηρημένη, modern art, story of mankind, coexistence symbiosis, modern human evolution, conceptual art, picture, plural of acrylic, abstract painting

Seven E

"Create"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 21,7x24,8 in

2.672,71 $
Διαθέσιμη Εκτύπωση
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "FESTA NAZIONALE" από Stefano Galli, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό Τοποθετήθηκε στο Ξύλινο φορείο σκελε…
FESTA NAZIONALE - Ζωγραφική, 19,7x27,6 in ©2007 από Stefano Galli - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Αστικός, città, balcone, Italia, festa nazionale

Stefano Galli

"FESTA NAZIONALE"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 19,7x27,6 in

4.326,86 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Broken Materials" από Nihan Yilmaz (NHN), Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
Broken Materials - Ζωγραφική, 31,5x23,6 in ©2024 από Nihan Yilmaz (NHN) - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Καθημερινή ζωή, David, renaissance, michelangelo, colorful, glitch, face, portrait, man, italian

Nihan Yilmaz (NHN)

"Broken Materials"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 31,5x23,6 in

1.965,46 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Assemblage de forme…" από Stephane Pontié, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό Τοποθετήθηκε στο Ξύλινο φορεί…
Assemblage de forme geometriques non courbes 03 - Ζωγραφική, 28,4x31,5 in ©2020 από Stephane Pontié - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Γεωμετρικός, abstraction, geometrique, acrylique, #artabstractgeometric, #pontiestephane, #culturepontie, #buyart, #creativart, #france, #deco

Stephane Pontié

"Assemblage de forme geometriques non courbes 03"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 28,4x31,5 in

6.488,1 $
Διαθέσιμη Εκτύπωση
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Blue and yellow aura" από Gela Mikava, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
Blue and yellow aura - Ζωγραφική, 39,4x31,5 in ©2022 από Gela Mikava - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Αφηρημένη, pink, blue, yellow, colorfull, new media, new style, new artist, 2024, famous art, aura paiting, energy color, Medium, contemporary art

Gela Mikava

"Blue and yellow aura"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 39,4x31,5 in

1.864,84 $
Διαθέσιμη Εκτύπωση
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Serie Nudity. #Gone…" από Artem Usá, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό Τοποθετήθηκε στο Ξύλινο φορείο σκελ…
Serie Nudity. #Gone with the Wind. N 151. - Ζωγραφική, 19,7x11,8 in ©2024 από Artem Usá - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Αγάπη, woman, girl, nudity, erotic, sexual, female, espace, home, decor, design, art, original, unique, drawing

Artem Usá

"Serie Nudity. #Gone with the Wind. N 151."

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 19,7x11,8 in

1.367,18 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "By Heart" από Feranmi Oyeleye, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
By Heart - Ζωγραφική, 48x48 in ©2024 από Feranmi Oyeleye - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Πορτρέτο, conceptual, brotherhood, contemporary, figurative, abstract to realism

Feranmi Oyeleye

"By Heart"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 48x48 in

5.142,79 $
Διαθέσιμη Εκτύπωση
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Actitud" από David García Rincón, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό Τοποθετήθηκε στο Ξύλινο φορείο σκελετό
Actitud - Ζωγραφική, 35,4x35,4 in ©2024 από David García Rincón - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Καθημερινή ζωή

David García Rincón

"Actitud"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 35,4x35,4 in

4.381,55 $
Διαθέσιμη Εκτύπωση
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Oltre" από Enzo Archetti, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό Τοποθετήθηκε στο Ξύλινο φορείο σκελετό
Oltre - Ζωγραφική, 35,4x31,5 in ©2022 από Enzo Archetti - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Αγάπη, blu, infinito

Enzo Archetti

"Oltre"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 35,4x31,5 in

2.502,49 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Connivence" από Philippe Viejo, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
Connivence - Ζωγραφική, 66,9x47,2 in ©2024 από Philippe Viejo - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Ζώο, safari, jungle, savane, lion

Philippe Viejo

"Connivence"

Ακρυλικό στο Αλουμίνιο | 66,9x47,2 in

11.833,24 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο ""Pascal"" από Giulio Benatti, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
"Pascal" - Ζωγραφική, 27,6x39,4 in ©2024 από Giulio Benatti - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Θρησκεία, giulio benatti, pascal, diptych

Giulio Benatti

""Pascal""

Ακρυλικό στο Χαρτί | 27,6x39,4 in

662,81 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Marketing" από Michel V. Meulenert (Meulenert), Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
Marketing - Ζωγραφική, 27,6x23,6 in ©2023 από Michel V. Meulenert (Meulenert) - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Αντρικά πορτρέτα, Personas, Estilo de Vida., Arte contemporáneo, Figuras, Relaciones sociales

Michel V. Meulenert (Meulenert)

"Marketing"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 27,6x23,6 in

770 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Mag Blue, Friendship" από Mag Blue, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
Mag Blue, Friendship - Ζωγραφική, 59,1x41,1 in ©2024 από Mag Blue - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Καθημερινή ζωή, relationship, friendship, girlfriend, boyfriend, love, family, bestfriend, best

Mag Blue

"Mag Blue, Friendship"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 59,1x41,1 in

2.063,92 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Mind Emancipation" από Timothy Olaniyi, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
Mind Emancipation - Ζωγραφική, 24x24 in ©2024 από Timothy Olaniyi - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Καθημερινή ζωή, African, mind, freedom, black, contemporary, strength, dignity, love, boldnesa

Timothy Olaniyi

"Mind Emancipation"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 24x24 in

2.110,93 $
Διαθέσιμη Εκτύπωση
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Le pas-sage" από Remi Delaplace, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό Τοποθετήθηκε στο Ξύλινο φορείο σκελετό
Le pas-sage - Ζωγραφική, 31,9x51,2 in ©2015 από Remi Delaplace - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Αφηρημένη, geometricpainting, geometricabstraction, landscapepainting, contemporarypainting, hardedgepainting, nonobjectiveart, emergingartist, abstraction

Remi Delaplace

"Le pas-sage"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 31,9x51,2 in

3.930,92 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Sui generis-II" από Stanislav Bojankov, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
Sui generis-II - Ζωγραφική, 26,4x26,4 in ©2020 από Stanislav Bojankov - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Αφηρημένη, abstract, conceptual, contemporary, mixed media, collage

Stanislav Bojankov

"Sui generis-II"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 26,4x26,4 in

1.749,99 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Black Coffee" από Mikhail Baranovskiy, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό Τοποθετήθηκε στο Ξύλινο φορείο σκ…
Black Coffee - Ζωγραφική, 39,4x27,6 in ©2024 από Mikhail Baranovskiy - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Καθημερινή ζωή, portrait, coffee, espresso, black&white, minimalism, expressionism, unique, life, story, everyday

Mikhail Baranovskiy

"Black Coffee"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 39,4x27,6 in

2.245 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Creatine" από Alexander Chalovsky, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
Creatine - Ζωγραφική, 59,1x22,1 in ©2022 από Alexander Chalovsky - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Παραμύθι, People, Collage, Human body, Portraits/Figure painting, Acrylic painting

Alexander Chalovsky

"Creatine"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 59,1x22,1 in

4.282,02 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "And As I Lay Down,…" από Simon Findlay, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
And As I Lay Down, The Devil Curled Up Beside Me In My Brain - Ζωγραφική, 59,1x47,2 in ©2023 από Simon Findlay - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Πολύχρωμα, words, poem, poetry, writing, typography, text based

Simon Findlay

"And As I Lay Down, The Devil Curled Up Beside Me In My Brain"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 59,1x47,2 in

2.340,62 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "mare" από Carlo Alberto Cozzani, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό Τοποθετήθηκε στο Χαρτόνι
mare - Ζωγραφική, 27,6x39,4 in ©2024 από Carlo Alberto Cozzani - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Αφηρημένη, mare, blu, linea di orizzonte, paesaggi di mare, mare nostrum, mare di liguria, mare sempre, arte, artecontemporanea, guardare, sempre, avanti

Carlo Alberto Cozzani

"mare"

Ακρυλικό στο Χαρτί | 27,6x39,4 in

2.953,11 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Astratto" από Dolores De Min, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
Astratto - Ζωγραφική, 23,6x27,6 in ©2023 από Dolores De Min - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Αφηρημένη

Dolores De Min

"Astratto"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 23,6x27,6 in

1.556,4 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Golden Ladies" από Bogdalena Bah, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
Golden Ladies - Ζωγραφική, 23,6x19,7 in ©2024 από Bogdalena Bah - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Γυναικεία γυμνά, gold figurines, girl figurines, black and gold

Bogdalena Bah

"Golden Ladies"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 23,6x19,7 in

1.893,27 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "Parallelism series,…" από Ak Douglas, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό
Parallelism series, Smoke - Ζωγραφική, 78x60 in ©2023 από Ak Douglas - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Καθημερινή ζωή, painting, figurative, contemporary, traditional, colourful, landscape, documentry, geological time, black & white, red green blue dots, stars cosmic sky, spritual & political, nature, architecture, lines geomatry, poetry, classic, indian global

Ak Douglas

"Parallelism series, Smoke"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 78x60 in

14.687 $
Ζωγραφική με τίτλο "audience" από Elif Yaman, Αυθεντικά έργα τέχνης, Ακρυλικό Τοποθετήθηκε στο Ξύλινο φορείο σκελετό
audience - Ζωγραφική, 19,7x19,7 in ©2024 από Elif Yaman - Conceptual Art, conceptual-art-579, Καθημερινή ζωή, #art, #artwork, #painting, #acrylicpainting, #blue, #chairs, #people, #audience, #contemporaryart

Elif Yaman

"audience"

Ακρυλικό στο Καμβάς | 19,7x19,7 in

1.158,28 $

Artmajeur

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