12 Views
2
View In My Room
Painting, Acrylic on Wood
Size: 11.8 W x 11.8 H x 0.4 D in
Ships in a Box
Shipping included
14-day satisfaction guarantee
Trustpilot Score
12 Views
2
Artist featured in a collection
In Alexandre Moore Rockefeller's work Abstract Nude 4, part of a woman’s body is painted in red on a white background, showcasing the artist’s mastery of minimalism and abstraction. The woman is depicted seated, with crossed legs suggested by the fewest possible lines. This simplicity captures the grace and elegance of the feminine posture. The vibrant red of the body contrasts powerfully with the white background, highlighting contours and shapes with remarkable visual intensity. In this piece, Rockefeller contrasts forms to reflect his imagination, using color around the female body. This work also represents a history of gesture—a movement that the artist isolates with a single color. He sought to create a piece that combines enjoyment with the act of painting, using acrylic on a small wood panel to explore abstraction on the theme of the nude. Each line and negative space is carefully placed, creating a harmonious composition that emphasizes the beauty and complexity of the female form. Though simplified, the crossed-leg posture conveys tranquility and intimacy, capturing a moment of contemplative calm. Abstract Nude 4 is a work where Rockefeller explores femininity through a restrained palette and a minimalist approach. The combination of vivid color with minimal lines demonstrates his ability to merge enjoyment with the act of painting, resulting in a piece that is both powerful and delicate, celebrating the female form in all its splendor. Ready to hang. Work on frame: 2 cm deep wooden frame for hanging the painting. It does not add any cm in length or width.
Acrylic on Wood
One-of-a-kind Artwork
11.8 W x 11.8 H x 0.4 D in
Not Framed
Yes
Ships in a Box
Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.
Ships in a box. Artists are responsible for packaging and adhering to Saatchi Art’s packaging guidelines.
France.
Please visit our help section or contact us.
Alexandre Moore Rockefeller was born in Paris in 1988 into a family of industrialists. He discovered painting by enrolling in art classes. He will forge his technique and will be fascinated by the history of art. He chose to study the nude in particular. The flesh being for him the last place of personal power. His work is inspired by artists who have sublimated the ideal beauty of the body: Titian (especially with "The Venus of Urbino"), Velasquez, Goya, Monet, Matisse, Modigliani, Tom Wesselmann. All his life, he sought to leave his mark on the present by relying on a precise knowledge of the past; his aesthetic, his approach. The form must be as pure as possible on a monochrome background. Only the reflection of the light by the metallic color materializes the space and the silhouette. The human body is transformed by the use of paint and iridescent colors, relying on inspirations from collage and sculpture. Drawing and color cannot be dissociated. Each line, each curve, each flat of colors participate in the creation of a form. This last one is sublimated by the interaction and the association of colors. His palette, made up of metallic colors, evolves in different ways generating force and energy, thus creating his signature. "My goal is not to represent an ideal and stereotyped body because I recognize the diversity of bodies. I am only interested in the manifestations of life and their forms that I transcend by elements of the body, by a sculpted silhouette and an abstract nudity. The touches of paint are the architecture of the body. The abstract forms projected on the bodies of my subjects have a pop dimension like erotic icons anchored in the 2000s. They are odes to femininity, to the autonomous, authentic and free woman. I work instinctively, with the feeling, with the vibration like a fusion with the living. To each line corresponds an idea. The body, its plasticity, its sensuality, seems to occupy the whole canvas. The proportions depend on the size of the canvas. The construction is done naturally. I shape the human body with a knife, with bursts of color simulating the metamorphosis into bursts of life. From this energy is born a sensation in the moment. The graphics, the intensity of each touch and the materials harmonize and articulate into a unique abstract figure. In this way I hope to achieve an aesthetic transposition of my reality." A.M. Rockefeller (February 2014).
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
We deliver world-class customer service to all of our art buyers.
Our 14-day satisfaction guarantee allows you to buy with confidence.
Explore an unparalleled artwork selection by artists from around the world.
We pay our artists more on every sale than other galleries.