

33 Views
4
View In My Room
Photography, Color on Paper
Size: 16 W x 20 H x 0.1 D in
Ships in a Tube
Shipping included
Trustpilot Score
33 Views
4
Artist featured in a collection
LIMITED EDITION PRINTS ARE AVAILABLE IN THE FOLLOWING SIZES • Small – Edition of 12: 30 x 40 cm (12 x 16 in) • Medium – Edition of 10: 40 x 50 cm (16 x 20 in) • Large – Edition of 3: 50 x 60 cm (20 x 24 in) • X-Large – Edition of 1: 76 x 102 cm (30 x 40 in) AUTHENTICITY AND SIGNATURE Printed o...
2024
Photography, Color on Paper
Limited Edition of 10
16 W x 20 H x 0.1 D in
No
Not Framed
Certificate is Included
Ships Rolled in a Tube
Shipping is included in price.
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Ships rolled in a tube. Artists are responsible for packaging and adhering to Saatchi Art’s packaging guidelines.
Germany.
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Dennis Schoenberg's photography operates within the tension between authenticity and artifice. His work meditates on how meaning is manufactured, circulated and displaced within the spectacle of popular culture. His portraits and scenes, steeped in subcultural iconography, revisit the visual codes of underground cultures not as mere documentation but as a decaying cultural archive which is absorbed, aestheticised and neutralised by capitalism's endless appetite for the new. Schoenberg responds not with rejection but with amplification. His photographs romanticise what was once raw, smooth what was once confrontational and turn marginality into allure. In doing so, he reveals how subversive forms are laundered by aesthetic desire. The lighting, composition and seductive surface of his images conspire to beautify rebellion, rendering it consumable. This act is not naïve but deliberate, almost performative. The artist's gesture is both affectionate and ironic: a form of homage that knowingly participates in the very act of sanitisation it seeks to expose. His photographs inhabit the uneasy space between critique and complicity, sentiment and surface. They suggest that in a culture where every image, attitude and identity can be repackaged for consumption, authenticity itself becomes a performance, while beauty remains perhaps the last act of resistance. Like Pop Art, which reflected on consumer culture by transforming the banal into art, his photography transforms identity and subculture into form and surface, while remaining aware of its own complicity. Yet beneath the polish lies a note of mourning, a sense that cultural expression, once lived and embodied, now survives chiefly through simulation. His photographs adopt and aestheticise elements of subculture, not to exploit them, but to expose how authenticity itself becomes stylised and commodified when filtered through the gaze of art and desire, thereby asking whether, in the age of AI-generated aesthetics, authenticity can still be experienced at all or whether even sincerity has become a stylistic effect. Drawing on theorists such as Guy Debord and Roland Barthes, Schoenberg understands that the spectacle consumes everything, even its critiques. His photographs inhabit this paradox fully. They seduce and accuse, beautify and expose. Here, beauty becomes both resistance and surrender, offering a way to glimpse what remains real in a world already mediated, branded and sold.
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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