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269

塞.托姆布雷

《無題 (B. 28)》

1970年作
石版印刷 重編織紙本(全紙本)
紙本:12 3/8 x 16 3/4 英吋 (31.4 x 42.5 公分)
款識:藝術家簡稱、編號IV/XXX(畫背)
共有250版阿拉伯數字版、30版羅馬數字藝術家試作版,由科隆Verein Progressiver畫廊出版,此為未裱第4版藝術家試作版。
This print was executed for a special edition, organized by Hans Neuendorf, Hamburg for the catalogue of the Cologne Art Fair 1970.

塞.托姆布雷

American | B. 1928 D. 2011

Cy Twombly emerged in the mid-1950s alongside New York artists Jasper Johns and Robert Rauschenberg. While at first developing a graffiti-like style influenced by Abstract Expressionist automatism–having notably studied under Franz Kline and Robert Motherwell at the legendary Black Mountain College between 1951 and 1952–Twombly was a prominent figure in the new generation of artists that challenged the abstract orthodoxy of the New York School. Twombly developed a highly unique pictorial language that found its purest expression upon his life-defining move to Rome in 1957. Simultaneously invoking classical history, poetry, mythology and his own contemporary lived experience, Twombly's visual idiom is distinguished by a remarkable vocabulary of signs and marks and the fusion of word and text. 

Cy Twombly produced graffiti-like paintings that were inspired by the work of Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock and Robert Motherwell. His gestural forms of lines, drips and splattering were at first not well-received, but the artist later became known as the leader of the estrangement from the Abstract Expressionism movement. Full of energy and rawness, Twombly's pieces are reminiscent of childhood sketches and reveal his inspiration from mythology and poetry.

瀏覽藝術家