メニュー
無料アート相談
プレビュープレビュー ARで試着ARで試着 手描き画への切り替え 手描き画への切り替え画像に切り替え 画像に切り替え シェアするシェアする
詳細を見る詳細を見る お気に入りに追加 お気に入りに追加 ダウンロードダウンロード 似ている作品似ている作品 X線調査X線調査 スライドショースライドショー

Outings Project

French visual artist Julien de Casabianca-Caumer blends street art, photography & film. Known for 'Outings Project,' pasting museum paintings in city streets.

ジークレー/アートプリント

迅速な制作と多彩な仕上げオプションを備えた、ミュージアムクオリティのジークレーまたはキャンバスプリント。 (手描き画への切り替え 手描き画への切り替え画像に切り替え 画像に切り替え)

Standard
custom
CM
INCH

作品のオリジナル比率に合わせた、当店の規定サイズからお選びください。

高さ

特定のフレームやスペースに合わせて、ご自身でサイズを指定することも可能です。選択されたサイズが元の画像の比率と一致しない場合、作品をトリミングするか、鏡面反射または単色での塗りつぶしによって画像を拡張いたします。制作を開始する前に、ご確認用のデジタルモックアップをお送りいたします。
画面上のプレビューには、実際のトリミングや拡張は反映されませんのでご注意ください。最終的な構図を正確に確認できるのは、モックアップのみとなります。
カスタムサイズも承っておりますが、元の比率を維持するためには、あらかじめ用意されたリストからサイズを選択することをお勧めいたします。

世界中への配送()は、標準の4〜5週間ではなく、2週間でお届けいたします。(11 8月)

why_choose_icon
世界中へ無料エクスプレス配送
why_choose_icon
高品質なリネンキャンバス
why_choose_icon
配送時完全保険付
why_choose_icon
関税・輸入税の払い戻し保証
why_choose_icon
忠実な色彩再現保証
why_choose_icon
60日間返品保証(製造上の欠陥のみ)
why_choose_icon
100% 全額返金保証
why_choose_icon
まとめ買い割引のご案内

合計金額

$ 81

reproduction

Outings Project

ジークレー/アートプリント

複製画のサイズ

-

合計金額

$ 81

作品詳細説明

Julien de Casabianca is a French visual artist and filmmaker. The artist initiated The Outings Project in 2014, where he transports paintings from museum walls into the street by photographing works at local museums and creating paste-ups on city walls. De Casabianca found his inspiration from the project when he visited the Louvre Museum and saw a painting by Jean-Auguste-Dominique Ingres placed in a corner, seemingly forgotten. Wanting to liberate the artwork, he came up with the idea of taking the image to the street. Since then, numerous museums worldwide have invited him to engage with their collections and merge the perceptions of classical and street art. By bringing well-known works traditionally only seen in a museum context to the street, The Outings Projects brings these canonical works to a new audience of city dwellers and passersby.

アーティストの略歴

Jenny Saville: A Body of Flesh and Shadow

Jenny Saville, born in Cambridge in 1970, is a British painter whose work has irrevocably shifted our gaze toward the complexities and contradictions inherent within the female form. Initially emerging as one of the Young British Artists (YBAs) alongside figures like Damien Hirst and Tracey Emin, Saville quickly distinguished herself through a radically different approach – eschewing conceptualism and shock tactics for an intensely visceral exploration of materiality and the lived experience of being a woman in the 21st century. Her canvases are dominated by monumental depictions of female bodies, often rendered with a startling realism that simultaneously celebrates and interrogates notions of beauty, desire, and societal expectations. Saville’s work isn't merely about representation; it’s an engagement with the body as a site of power, vulnerability, and profound emotional resonance.

Early Influences and Artistic Development

Saville’s artistic journey began in a period of significant upheaval within the art world. The YBAs, emerging from the late 1980s and early 1990s, challenged established conventions with their provocative and often confrontational work. However, Saville deliberately distanced herself from this trend, choosing instead to focus on the meticulous observation and rendering of flesh – a deliberate rejection of the prevailing minimalist aesthetic. Her initial training at St Martin’s School of Art and later at the Royal College of Art provided her with a rigorous foundation in traditional oil painting techniques, which she then skillfully employed to achieve an unprecedented level of detail and texture. Influences can be traced back to the Old Masters – particularly Rubens' monumental depictions of the human body – alongside a fascination with contemporary photography, particularly its ability to capture fleeting moments of beauty and vulnerability. This synthesis of historical precedent and modern sensibility is central to her distinctive style.

The Language of Flesh: Themes and Symbolism

Saville’s paintings are rarely straightforward portraits; they are complex investigations into the relationship between the body, perception, and societal pressures. Her subjects – frequently obese or otherwise considered ‘unconventional’ by conventional standards – are presented with an unflinching honesty that challenges viewers to confront their own biases and assumptions about beauty. The sheer scale of her canvases—often monumental in size—further amplifies this effect, forcing the viewer into a direct and intimate engagement with the depicted figures. Recurring motifs include the texture of skin, the weight of flesh, and the interplay of light and shadow, creating a sense of both vulnerability and power. Saville’s work consistently tackles issues surrounding gender binary, obesity, the imposed ideal of beauty, and the psychological impact of our relationship with our own bodies. She doesn't shy away from depicting discomfort or awkwardness, acknowledging that the experience of being human is rarely smooth or seamless.

Critical Acclaim and Institutional Recognition

Saville’s work has garnered widespread critical acclaim and significant institutional recognition. She quickly established herself as a leading figure in contemporary painting, her canvases commanding high prices at auction and securing prominent positions in major museums worldwide. Solo exhibitions have been held at prestigious institutions such as the Museo di Palazzo Vecchio in Venice, the Scottish National Gallery in Edinburgh, and the Gagosian Gallery, cementing her position as one of the most important artists working today. Her paintings are currently housed in collections including The Broad in Los Angeles, the George Economou Collections in Athens, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, demonstrating a profound impact on the art world.

A Legacy of Embodiment

Jenny Saville’s contribution to contemporary art lies not simply in her technical skill or her striking imagery, but in her willingness to confront difficult and uncomfortable truths about the human body and its representation. Her work has sparked vital conversations about beauty standards, societal expectations, and the complexities of female identity. By focusing on the materiality of flesh—its weight, texture, and vulnerability—Saville has created a powerful and enduring body of work that continues to challenge and inspire viewers long after its creation. Her paintings are a testament to the power of art to illuminate the hidden depths of human experience and to provoke critical reflection on our own perceptions and biases.

基本情報

  • Artistic Movement Or Style: Figurative painting
  • Artists Or Movements Influenced By This Artist:
    • YBA scene
    • Neo-conceptual art
  • Artists Who Influenced This Artist:
    • Rubenses
    • Cubism
    • Baroque
  • Date Of Birth: 1970
  • Full Name: Jenny Saville
  • Nationality: British
  • Notable Artworks:
    • Stripped
    • Morning Song
    • Slow View
  • Place Of Birth: Cambridge, UK