Helmut Middendorf (1953) - Jeux Olympiques 1992





| €28 |
|---|
Catawiki Buyer Protection
Your payment’s safe with us until you receive your object.View details
Trustpilot 4.4 | 125661 reviews
Rated Excellent on Trustpilot.
Helmut Middendorf's Jeux Olympiques 1992 is an original signed silkscreen, numbered by the artist, in a limited edition of 250, measuring 90 by 60 cm, in a contemporary Pop culture style, from France and sold by Galerie.
Description from the seller
Original silkscreen by the German artist Helmut Middendorf (1953), signed and numbered in pencil by the artist.
Print run of 250 copies. (The numbering may differ from what is visible in the photograph.)
The book in the photo is not for sale; it is presented here for documentation purposes.
Perfect condition.
Careful packaging and tracked international shipping.
Middendorf, along with painters like Jirí Georg Dokoupil, Rainer Fetting, Salomé, and Elvira Bach, belongs to the Les Nouveaux Fauves movement, a group of artists who, in the early 1980s in Germany and Austria, developed a violent, carefree, and hedonistic painting style.
In 2003/2004, his work was featured at the 'Obsessive Malerei' exhibition, a retrospective on the New Fauves in Karlsruhe. His works are also part of the public collection of the Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain in Paris.
Original silkscreen by the German artist Helmut Middendorf (1953), signed and numbered in pencil by the artist.
Print run of 250 copies. (The numbering may differ from what is visible in the photograph.)
The book in the photo is not for sale; it is presented here for documentation purposes.
Perfect condition.
Careful packaging and tracked international shipping.
Middendorf, along with painters like Jirí Georg Dokoupil, Rainer Fetting, Salomé, and Elvira Bach, belongs to the Les Nouveaux Fauves movement, a group of artists who, in the early 1980s in Germany and Austria, developed a violent, carefree, and hedonistic painting style.
In 2003/2004, his work was featured at the 'Obsessive Malerei' exhibition, a retrospective on the New Fauves in Karlsruhe. His works are also part of the public collection of the Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain in Paris.

