Null FRANCESC GIMENO. Studio, a boy. Charcoal drawing on paper
Signed
32x25.5 cm…
Descripción

FRANCESC GIMENO. Studio, a boy. Charcoal drawing on paper Signed 32x25.5 cm. Rust. Silvery wood frame. Not examined without frame.

634 

FRANCESC GIMENO. Studio, a boy. Charcoal drawing on paper Signed 32x25.5 cm. Rust. Silvery wood frame. Not examined without frame.

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FRANCESCA WOODMAN (Denver, Colorado, 1958-Nueva York, 1981) Sin título, de la serie "Angels", Roma, 1977-1978. Gelatina de plata. Impreso posteriormente por Igor Bakht, sello en el reverso. Firmado por George y Betty Woodman, anotado n. 297 "Para Igor Kind Ryards" a lápiz. Sello de crédito PE/FW en el reverso. Procedencia: Colección privada Foster Glasgow. Medidas: 15,5 x 15,5 cm (imagen); 26 x 21 cm (papel). Esta fotografía pertenece al periodo romano de Woodman. El desdibujamiento del cuerpo, las presencias fantasmales, la noche y los espectros conforman una sugerente estampa en la que la propia artista es la protagonista. Woodman indaga en la parte oculta de su propio ser, tratando de hacer visible lo que es esencialmente invisible. En esta serie, la fotógrafa emplea técnicas de larga exposición para captar el movimiento, lo que da lugar a figuras borrosas que parecen desvanecerse o fundirse con su entorno. Este efecto crea una sensación de dinamismo y evoca la idea de seres etéreos o fantasmas. Realizó esta serie (Ángeles) en Roma. Entre 1975 y 1979, mientras estudiaba en el Providence College of Fine Arts, donde Francesca Woodman destacó por sus habilidades artísticas, obtuvo una beca del Honors Program que le permitió vivir durante un año en las instalaciones de la escuela en el Palazzo Cenci de Roma. Conoció y se unió a un grupo de artistas vinculados a la Galería y Librería Maldoror. Sus propietarios, Giuseppe Casetti y Paolo Missigoi, se sentían atraídos por todos aquellos relacionados con los movimientos de vanguardia, más concretamente, los relacionados con el futurismo, el surrealismo y el simbolismo. Fueron los propietarios quienes consiguieron incluir a Woodman en una exposición de cinco jóvenes artistas en la Galería Ugo Ferranti, en la que fue la única estadounidense que participó. Fue su primera exposición individual. Fue en Roma donde produjo algunas de sus obras más conocidas hasta hoy, como "On Being an Angel", "Glove Series", "Self-deceit". Sus fotografías reformulan la imagen de la mujer, Francesca Woodman fue una fotógrafa estadounidense conocida por sus autorretratos íntimos en blanco y negro. Se licenció en la Escuela de Diseño de Rhode Island, la Universidad de Bellas Artes de Providence. Su fotografía se caracteriza principalmente por el uso de una única modelo, normalmente desnuda. Normalmente era ella, pero en varias fotografías retrató a varios de sus amigos. El cuerpo captado por la cámara solía estar en movimiento, debido a los largos tiempos de exposición, o la imagen no era nítida. También utilizaba otras técnicas, como enmascararse o intentar mimetizarse con los objetos o el propio entorno. Nació en una familia de artistas. Desde muy pequeña, junto con su hermano Charles Woodman, fue introducida en el mundo del arte por sus padres, George Woodman y Betty Woodman, ambos artistas plásticos. Hoy gestionan un archivo de más de 800 imágenes de su hija, 120 de las cuales han sido expuestas o publicadas. Pertenece a la generación de mujeres vanguardistas de los años 70 que reivindicaron su aportación y visión del mundo, en la que también se incluyen artistas activistas como Cindy Sherman, Martha Rosler o Ana Mendieta.

JOE COLOMBO (Milan, 1930-1971) for ZANOTTA. Pair of "Birillo" stools, 1970s. Chromed metal and plastic. White vinyl seat. Designer's and manufacturer's stamp on base. In good condition. Measurements: 105 x 43 x 44 cm. The Birillo stool was designed by Joe Colombo and chosen by the acclaimed film director Ridley Scott as a space-age inspired stool on the set of Blade Runner. The combination of modern materials for the time (plastic and steel derivatives) made it a completely new model. Architect and designer Cesare Colombo, nicknamed "Joe" Colombo, was an artist, architect, furniture, product and interior designer who was central to Italian design in the 1960s. Trained at the Academy of Fine Arts and Architecture of the Polytechnic University of Milan, where he devoted himself, among other things, to painting, sculpture and drawing, skills that would serve him to develop his career as a designer by setting up his own studio in 1962. Throughout the 1960s he collaborated with major publishers such as Kartell, O-Luce and Zanotta. Many of his works are still exhibited in museums around the world and the artist is the subject of regular retrospectives, studies and exhibitions. During the 1960s, the designer worked mainly on the creation of furniture that stood out for being easily modular, flexible and practical, as is the case with these chairs, which can be transported and adapted to the needs of their user. He focused on a global design, where the elements of the furniture transcend space and architecture. In this way, Colombo moves towards a form of design that helps the user to save space and time. Some of the Italian designer's most famous works are the "Elda" armchair (1963), the "Continental Library" (1965), the "Universal" (1967) and "Tube" chairs (1969) and the "Chariot Boby" (1969). His career and achievements led him to take part in the 14th Milan Triennale, exhibiting some of his interior design proposals. In 1964 he won the gold medal at the Milan Triennale with the acrylic table lamp, which is now part of the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art in Philadelphia. In 1972, shortly after his death, his overall furniture project was shown in the exhibition "Italia: The New Domestic Landscape" held at MOMA in New York, realised by ELCO - FIARM, Boffi, Ideal - Standard, with the help of Sormani. In 1984, a retrospective of his work was held at the Villeneuve Museum of Modern Art. Subsequently, in 2005, the Milan Triennale hosted the retrospective Joe Colombo Inventing the Future.

HARRY BERTOIA (Italy, 1915 - USA, 1978). Set of four "Side Bertoia" chairs, ca. 1960. Steel rods. Measurements: 74 x 46 x 56 cm. Drawing on his experience as head of the Experimental Department at the Eames Studio, Harry Bertoia designed the Side chair for Knoll International in 1952. A single piece of steel rod forms the seat and back, joined to a lightweight steel frame that forms the base. The visible structure of the Side model suggests that the chairs were objects in space, and as Bertoia said, "space passes through them". A painter, graphic artist, sculptor, university professor and furniture designer, Harry Bertoia emigrated to the United States at the age of fifteen, and it was there that he developed his training and career. He studied at the Detroit Society of Arts and Crafts and later at the Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield, Michigan, where he later became a teacher and created the department of metalwork. During these years he began to experiment with the forms of jewelry, and to explore ideas that would later emerge in his sculpture and designs. In 1943 he began his collaboration with designer Charles Eames, with whom he worked until 1946. After a period working for Point Loma Navel Electronics as a creator of equipment manuals, in 1949 he joined Hans Knoll at Knoll Associates. His first sculpture exhibition took place at the Knoll Showroom in New York in 1951, and the following year Knoll would patent his most famous furniture design, the welded rod "Diamond" chair. Bertoia's designs are now in the collections of major design and contemporary art museums, including MoMA in New York and many others.