Luis Filcer (1927-2018) - Figuren





€30 | ||
|---|---|---|
€25 | ||
€20 | ||
Catawiki Buyer Protection
Your payment’s safe with us until you receive your object.View details
Trustpilot 4.4 | 135391 reviews
Rated Excellent on Trustpilot.
Luis Filcer, Figuren, mixed media on paper, original edition, 32 × 50 cm, from the 1960s to 1970, hand-signed, in good condition, origin Netherlands, sold by Galerie.
Description from the seller
Luis Filcer
Figures
Mixed media on paper
32 x 50 cm
Luis Filcer (Zhytomyr, Ukraine, 1927 – 2018, San Miguel de Allende, Mexico) was a Mexican Expressionist visual artist. Filcer began his career as an artist in Mexico, where in 1928, when he was only six months old, he had fled with his family due to the persecution of the Jewish population after the Russian Revolution. At sixteen he began studies at the Academia de San Carlos in Mexico City. In the morning he attended classes and in the afternoon he worked on his paintings and drawings.
In his artistic practice Filcer was strongly influenced by the life of Vincent van Gogh and he addressed themes such as injustice and struggle in everyday life. He was also an admirer of the artists Francisco Goya and José Clemente Orozco. Subjects Filcer depicted included the Bloodbath of Tlatelolco in 1968, the casinos in Las Vegas, the Mexican Revolution of 1910, and the Mexico City Metro. Filcer’s work shows no idealism, but investigates justice and injustice to provoke change.
Filcer lived and worked for more than twenty years in the Netherlands, much of it in De Rijp (NH). His work has been exhibited more than 340 times in leading museums and galleries around the world.
The work comes from the artist’s heirs.
Viewing is, of course, possible. All information can be found on our own website.
Seller's Story
Luis Filcer
Figures
Mixed media on paper
32 x 50 cm
Luis Filcer (Zhytomyr, Ukraine, 1927 – 2018, San Miguel de Allende, Mexico) was a Mexican Expressionist visual artist. Filcer began his career as an artist in Mexico, where in 1928, when he was only six months old, he had fled with his family due to the persecution of the Jewish population after the Russian Revolution. At sixteen he began studies at the Academia de San Carlos in Mexico City. In the morning he attended classes and in the afternoon he worked on his paintings and drawings.
In his artistic practice Filcer was strongly influenced by the life of Vincent van Gogh and he addressed themes such as injustice and struggle in everyday life. He was also an admirer of the artists Francisco Goya and José Clemente Orozco. Subjects Filcer depicted included the Bloodbath of Tlatelolco in 1968, the casinos in Las Vegas, the Mexican Revolution of 1910, and the Mexico City Metro. Filcer’s work shows no idealism, but investigates justice and injustice to provoke change.
Filcer lived and worked for more than twenty years in the Netherlands, much of it in De Rijp (NH). His work has been exhibited more than 340 times in leading museums and galleries around the world.
The work comes from the artist’s heirs.
Viewing is, of course, possible. All information can be found on our own website.

