Sylvain Barberot - Pop christ # 2





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Sylvain Barberot 的 Pop christ # 2 是一件由合金制成并镶嵌8克拉金、蜡及金色亮片的波普艺术风格雕塑,手签名,尺寸高41.5厘米,宽11厘米,深8厘米,重3.5千克,创作于2026年,产地法国。
卖家的描述
With Pop Christ, the artist offers a striking and ambiguous rereading of the Christ figure, oscillating between sacred iconography and contemporary aesthetics. Deprived of its arms, this Christ alloyed appears as a body amputated of its redemptive gesture, reduced to a mute presence, almost vulnerable. This absence is not only formal: it acts as a symbolic displacement, questioning the capacity to act, to save, or even to bless in a world saturated with images and signs.
The surface of the sculpture, covered with a paint enriched by 30% pure gold and gold glitter, diverts the traditional codes of the sacred. Gold, historically associated with transcendence and the timeless, is here treated in a glittering materiality, almost decorative, evoking the world of spectacle, consumption, and “pop.” This fractured brilliance captures light in an unstable way, transforming the figure into a vibrant icon, both attractive and troubling. The sacred is thus contaminated by the codes of glitter, blurring the boundaries between devotion and aesthetic fascination.
The sculpture is kept elevated by a black metal rod, which accentuates the suspended and isolated effect. The steel base, covered with red wax, introduces a strong chromatic tension. This deep, organic red immediately evokes blood, suffering and sacrifice, while preserving a material dimension that is almost industrial. It acts as a terrestrial anchor, recalling the corporality of Christ in the face of the artificial gleam of gold.
Pop Christ thus sits at the crossroads of several registers: between relic and pop object, between sacred icon and contemporary artefact. By fragmenting the body and hybridizing the materials, the work invites us to rethink the persistence of religious figures in a visual imaginary dominated by brilliance, reproduction, and the loss of symbolic depth.
With Pop Christ, the artist offers a striking and ambiguous rereading of the Christ figure, oscillating between sacred iconography and contemporary aesthetics. Deprived of its arms, this Christ alloyed appears as a body amputated of its redemptive gesture, reduced to a mute presence, almost vulnerable. This absence is not only formal: it acts as a symbolic displacement, questioning the capacity to act, to save, or even to bless in a world saturated with images and signs.
The surface of the sculpture, covered with a paint enriched by 30% pure gold and gold glitter, diverts the traditional codes of the sacred. Gold, historically associated with transcendence and the timeless, is here treated in a glittering materiality, almost decorative, evoking the world of spectacle, consumption, and “pop.” This fractured brilliance captures light in an unstable way, transforming the figure into a vibrant icon, both attractive and troubling. The sacred is thus contaminated by the codes of glitter, blurring the boundaries between devotion and aesthetic fascination.
The sculpture is kept elevated by a black metal rod, which accentuates the suspended and isolated effect. The steel base, covered with red wax, introduces a strong chromatic tension. This deep, organic red immediately evokes blood, suffering and sacrifice, while preserving a material dimension that is almost industrial. It acts as a terrestrial anchor, recalling the corporality of Christ in the face of the artificial gleam of gold.
Pop Christ thus sits at the crossroads of several registers: between relic and pop object, between sacred icon and contemporary artefact. By fragmenting the body and hybridizing the materials, the work invites us to rethink the persistence of religious figures in a visual imaginary dominated by brilliance, reproduction, and the loss of symbolic depth.

