Jacob Kanbier (1949-2020) - Good boy






Master’s in culture and arts innovation, with a decade in 20th-21st century Italian art.
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Artist Jacob Kanbier (1949-2020); Title Good boy; Technique mixed media on canvas; Year 2020; Size 40 cm by 30 cm; Signed on the front; Edition Original; Sold with frame; Origin Netherlands; Condition In good condition.
Description from the seller
Original work by Jacob Kanbier
Mixed media on canvas
Hand signed on the front.
He was the son of Susanna Louise Plantfeber and Jacob Kanbier. Between 1970 and 1981 (divorce), he was married to Wilhelmina Christina de Mooij.
In 1985, he began his training at the art academy in Amsterdam, but he was not attracted to art education, so he is largely self-taught. Kanbier is mainly inspired by Willem de Kooning and Jean-Michel Basquiat. Following these artists, he mainly creates 'rough' work in an 'explosive' creative process, called 'live-action painting'. He considers himself a neo-symbolist.
He collaborated with related artists such as Justus Donker and Justus Dick Bakhuizen van den Brink, and with Peter Klashorst's After Nature group. Later, Jacob was also a member of the Artists Collective, "De Leidsche Mondialen," founded by Dick Bakhuizen van den Brink.
In 1987, Kanbier had his first solo exhibition at the Museum De Lakenhal in Leiden and performed in an 'action-painting show' at the Boulevard of Broken Dreams in Amsterdam. Herman Brood, Jules Deelder, and Simon Vinkenoog also participated. In 1989, he presented the Manifesto of Neosymbolism at the Stedelijk Museum (Amsterdam).
Kanbier worked, after periods in Paris, Prague, and Friesland, in his hometown Leiden. His work is part of the art collections of, among others, Queen Juliana, Prince Willem-Alexander, the Senate building in The Hague, Museum De Lakenhal, Wim Kok, Hedy d'Ancona, and Felix Rottenberg.
Original work by Jacob Kanbier
Mixed media on canvas
Hand signed on the front.
He was the son of Susanna Louise Plantfeber and Jacob Kanbier. Between 1970 and 1981 (divorce), he was married to Wilhelmina Christina de Mooij.
In 1985, he began his training at the art academy in Amsterdam, but he was not attracted to art education, so he is largely self-taught. Kanbier is mainly inspired by Willem de Kooning and Jean-Michel Basquiat. Following these artists, he mainly creates 'rough' work in an 'explosive' creative process, called 'live-action painting'. He considers himself a neo-symbolist.
He collaborated with related artists such as Justus Donker and Justus Dick Bakhuizen van den Brink, and with Peter Klashorst's After Nature group. Later, Jacob was also a member of the Artists Collective, "De Leidsche Mondialen," founded by Dick Bakhuizen van den Brink.
In 1987, Kanbier had his first solo exhibition at the Museum De Lakenhal in Leiden and performed in an 'action-painting show' at the Boulevard of Broken Dreams in Amsterdam. Herman Brood, Jules Deelder, and Simon Vinkenoog also participated. In 1989, he presented the Manifesto of Neosymbolism at the Stedelijk Museum (Amsterdam).
Kanbier worked, after periods in Paris, Prague, and Friesland, in his hometown Leiden. His work is part of the art collections of, among others, Queen Juliana, Prince Willem-Alexander, the Senate building in The Hague, Museum De Lakenhal, Wim Kok, Hedy d'Ancona, and Felix Rottenberg.
