Arman, ‘Untitled, Sliced guitar with acrylic paint on canvas’, 2002, Corridor Contemporary
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Arman

Untitled, Sliced guitar with acrylic paint on canvas, 2002

Sliced guitar with acrylic paint (burnt sienna, red cerulian, ultramarin blue, forrest green gray, burnt umber) on canvas
32 × 24 × 4 in
81.3 × 61 × 10.2 cm
.
$48,000
Ships from Tel-Aviv, IL
Free shipping worldwide
Location
Tel-Aviv, Philadelphia
Certificate
Certificate of authenticity
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About the work
Medium
Signature
Hand-signed by artist
Certificate of authenticity
Included
Frame
Included
Arman
French-American, 1928–2005
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Arman (born Armand Pierre Fernandez) was an early proponent of accumulation and scatter art. In 1959, he began displaying collections of objects in Plexiglas cases and creating installations of strewn garbage, which he called “Poubelles,” or “trash bins.” He also welded identical objects together to create larger sculptural pieces. In 1961, along with Yves Klein, Jean Tinguely, Jacques Villeglé, art critic Pierre Restany, and others, Arman founded Nouveau Réalisme, a group interested in new approaches to the concept of “reality.” Spending time in New York in the 1960s, Arman adopted destruction as a strategy for creating something new—slicing, burning, and smashing objects such as bronze statues and musical instruments to mount on canvas. Andy Warhol owned two of Arman’s Poubelles, and Arman appears in the Warhol’s 1964 film Dinner at Daley’s.

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Arman, ‘Untitled, Sliced guitar with acrylic paint on canvas’, 2002, Corridor Contemporary
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Save
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Share
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About the work
Medium
Signature
Hand-signed by artist
Certificate of authenticity
Included
Frame
Included
Arman
French-American, 1928–2005
Follow

Arman (born Armand Pierre Fernandez) was an early proponent of accumulation and scatter art. In 1959, he began displaying collections of objects in Plexiglas cases and creating installations of strewn garbage, which he called “Poubelles,” or “trash bins.” He also welded identical objects together to create larger sculptural pieces. In 1961, along with Yves Klein, Jean Tinguely, Jacques Villeglé, art critic Pierre Restany, and others, Arman founded Nouveau Réalisme, a group interested in new approaches to the concept of “reality.” Spending time in New York in the 1960s, Arman adopted destruction as a strategy for creating something new—slicing, burning, and smashing objects such as bronze statues and musical instruments to mount on canvas. Andy Warhol owned two of Arman’s Poubelles, and Arman appears in the Warhol’s 1964 film Dinner at Daley’s.

Arman

Untitled, Sliced guitar with acrylic paint on canvas, 2002

Sliced guitar with acrylic paint (burnt sienna, red cerulian, ultramarin blue, forrest green gray, burnt umber) on canvas
32 × 24 × 4 in
81.3 × 61 × 10.2 cm
.
$48,000
Ships from Tel-Aviv, IL
Free shipping worldwide
Location
Tel-Aviv, Philadelphia
Certificate
Certificate of authenticity
This work includes a certificate of authenticity.
Locked
Secure payment
Secure transactions by credit card through Stripe.
Learn more.
Want to sell a work by this artist? Consign with Artsy.
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