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9
View In My Room
Painting, Oil on Canvas
Size: 35.4 W x 27.6 H x 1 D in
Ships in a Box
1430 Views
9
Artist featured in a collection
This picture was inspired by an exhibition of the famous marine artist Ivan Aivazovsky, which I recently visited in the State Russian Museum in Saint-Petersburg. In this painting I applied many layers of color to create a transparent quality for showing the play of light. This painting depicts a sea during a storm and a ship pushed up by a great waves. This picture needs to be framed guided by your taste. Hanging hardware is included. Please give me 5 additional business days to get permission for export.
Oil on Canvas
One-of-a-kind Artwork
35.4 W x 27.6 H x 1 D in
Not Framed
Not applicable
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.
Russia.
Shipments from Russia may experience delays due to country's regulations for exporting valuable artworks.
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Yuriy Matrosov's large scale paintings suggest an imaginary world full of intricate detail, rich colour, and precious objects, which distracts from the grand melancholic view of ruined fantastic cities. Inspired by Paolo Veronese's fifteenth century large-format history paintings, Matrosow depicts majestic architectural settings for creating his dramatic perspectival effects that erase the boundary between image and reality. Populated with a wealth of different creatures, his pictures portrayed calming scenes of all-conquering life. Matrosov uses ruines as a symbol of the past. The rhythm of falling vaults, truncated columns and breaking plinths can be terrifying and beautiful at the same time, like our past. But all is flux, nothing stays still. One empire replaces another, and all we can do is create our future today. This sense of the beauty of present is dominated in both The Landscape with Ruins of the Mythical City (2009) and Ruins with Animals (2012-13), the two largest and most ambitious murals the artist has yet made. He has also made "Underwater city," very large (1×3 m) ceramic panel, and "marine paintings", which shows the destructive side, and beauty of nature. Yuriy Matrosov was born in 1975 in Leningrad, USSR and lives and works in Saint-Petersburg.
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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