Eduardo Chillida (1924-2002) - Composition





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Eduardo Chillida, Composition, litografia del 1996 in edizione limitata, firma su lastra, 40 x 30 cm con passe-partout, Spagna; cornice non inclusa e in buone condizioni.
Descrizione del venditore
Dimensioni: 40x30 cm con passepartout. Cornice non inclusa
Firmata stampata, edizione limitata a 500 esemplari, numerata.
Taller Hatz, San Sebastián, Poligrafa.
In ottime condizioni
Imballo accurato e spedizione internazionale registrata
Eduardo Chillida’s profound exploration of space and material forms part of a dynamic dialogue with the giants of modern and contemporary art. While sharing a deeply rooted Spanish heritage with trailblazers like Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dalí, and Antoni Tàpies, Chillida’s structured abstractions offer a serene contrast to Picasso’s Cubist transformations, Dalí’s dreamlike Surrealism, and Tàpies’s raw, textured informalism. At the same time, his tactile experimentation resonates with the playful, expressive art of Juan García Ripollés. Even across differing movements, a compelling tension exists between Chillida’s timeless, monumental sculpture and the bright, mass-media commentary of Pop Art icon Andy Warhol, as well as the subversive, ephemeral street interventions of Banksy, demonstrating how artists continually redefine boundaries to shape our perception of reality and public space.
Dimensioni: 40x30 cm con passepartout. Cornice non inclusa
Firmata stampata, edizione limitata a 500 esemplari, numerata.
Taller Hatz, San Sebastián, Poligrafa.
In ottime condizioni
Imballo accurato e spedizione internazionale registrata
Eduardo Chillida’s profound exploration of space and material forms part of a dynamic dialogue with the giants of modern and contemporary art. While sharing a deeply rooted Spanish heritage with trailblazers like Pablo Picasso, Salvador Dalí, and Antoni Tàpies, Chillida’s structured abstractions offer a serene contrast to Picasso’s Cubist transformations, Dalí’s dreamlike Surrealism, and Tàpies’s raw, textured informalism. At the same time, his tactile experimentation resonates with the playful, expressive art of Juan García Ripollés. Even across differing movements, a compelling tension exists between Chillida’s timeless, monumental sculpture and the bright, mass-media commentary of Pop Art icon Andy Warhol, as well as the subversive, ephemeral street interventions of Banksy, demonstrating how artists continually redefine boundaries to shape our perception of reality and public space.

