Arnaud Puig "ARDPG" (1980) - Versus






Over 10 years' experience in art trade and previously founded his own gallery.
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Arnaud Puig of France, known as ARDPG, presents Versus, an original 2020 mixed‑media street art work, 80 by 80 cm, 3 kg, hand‑signed and sold directly by the artist.
Description from the seller
The artist ARDPG, pseudonym of Arnaud Puig, is a French artist born in 1980 in Périgueux and living today in Bordeaux. Coming from graffiti culture, which he discovers and practices from the 1990s, he gradually develops a pictorial body of work that goes beyond traditional street art. Alongside his artistic practice, he studies art history at university, a training that profoundly nourishes his approach and his visual imagination. His work thus sits at the crossroads of several realms: that of classical painting, urban culture, and contemporary plastic experiments. Through painting, collage, typography or interventions in public space, ARDPG explores the tensions and possible dialogues between these different visual heritages.
This reflection finds a particularly strong expression in his series VERSUS, which has become one of the major axes of his work. In these works, the artist stages a true aesthetic confrontation between the history of art and contemporary urban culture. Figures inspired by classical painting — faces, portraits or fragments of ancient compositions — often appear on the canvas, then are disturbed, covered or crossed by signs from graffiti: words, typographies, gestural strokes or graphic marks.
The term Versus evokes the idea of a duel, but with ARDPG this opposition becomes primarily a visual dialogue. Scholarly references and street codes intertwine, respond to each other and sometimes clash on the surface of the canvas. The artist thus creates hybrid images where the past and the present overlay, revealing the unexpected connections between traditional painting and the spontaneous energy of graffiti.
Through the VERSUS series, ARDPG questions the hierarchy often established between institutional art and urban practices. By confronting these two worlds, he suggests that they actually share the same impulse: that of leaving a trace, of marking a surface and of transmitting a vision. His works thus become spaces of tension but also of reconciliation, where the history of art and contemporary culture meet to form a new visual language.
In this work he combines collage as a travel notebook with graffiti to create a whole that takes us on a journey through the history of art
The artist ARDPG, pseudonym of Arnaud Puig, is a French artist born in 1980 in Périgueux and living today in Bordeaux. Coming from graffiti culture, which he discovers and practices from the 1990s, he gradually develops a pictorial body of work that goes beyond traditional street art. Alongside his artistic practice, he studies art history at university, a training that profoundly nourishes his approach and his visual imagination. His work thus sits at the crossroads of several realms: that of classical painting, urban culture, and contemporary plastic experiments. Through painting, collage, typography or interventions in public space, ARDPG explores the tensions and possible dialogues between these different visual heritages.
This reflection finds a particularly strong expression in his series VERSUS, which has become one of the major axes of his work. In these works, the artist stages a true aesthetic confrontation between the history of art and contemporary urban culture. Figures inspired by classical painting — faces, portraits or fragments of ancient compositions — often appear on the canvas, then are disturbed, covered or crossed by signs from graffiti: words, typographies, gestural strokes or graphic marks.
The term Versus evokes the idea of a duel, but with ARDPG this opposition becomes primarily a visual dialogue. Scholarly references and street codes intertwine, respond to each other and sometimes clash on the surface of the canvas. The artist thus creates hybrid images where the past and the present overlay, revealing the unexpected connections between traditional painting and the spontaneous energy of graffiti.
Through the VERSUS series, ARDPG questions the hierarchy often established between institutional art and urban practices. By confronting these two worlds, he suggests that they actually share the same impulse: that of leaving a trace, of marking a surface and of transmitting a vision. His works thus become spaces of tension but also of reconciliation, where the history of art and contemporary culture meet to form a new visual language.
In this work he combines collage as a travel notebook with graffiti to create a whole that takes us on a journey through the history of art
