175 Views
9
View In My Room
Sculpture, Paint on Cardboard
Size: 23.6 W x 23.6 H x 2.4 D in
Ships in a Crate
175 Views
9
Artist featured in a collection
Mixed media sculpture: paper, artboard, acrylic paint on mdf panel white monochrome relief. Ready to hang, geometrical-abstract relief, reminding of the Stijl and Zero, quiet, spiritual and meditative, patiently composed and constructed from art board and paper elements, catching the light from different points of view and throughout different moments of the day. comes with a signed certificate of authenticity
2019
Paint on Cardboard
One-of-a-kind Artwork
23.6 W x 23.6 H x 2.4 D in
Not Framed
Not applicable
Ships in a Crate
Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.
Ships in a wooden crate for additional protection of heavy or oversized artworks. Artists are responsible for packaging and adhering to Saatchi Art’s packaging guidelines.
Netherlands.
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Netherlands
(When some works are not for sale, that is only temporarely, because they are out for an exhibition!) I work with simple forms (squares, lines) and materials (paper, art board, wood, mdf, foam board) in simple rhythmic compositions. Everything that is not important or redundant, can be left out. Simple also means: no colour, white. I prefer to work in a language of minimal elements: a repetition of the same element, sometimes with little shifts or distortions. Sometimes there are more elements, that amplify each other but not confuse and in that way form a new element. The handwriting that takes shape during the process, just exists and can be there. It is a continuing investigation of what is possible with these minimal means and their shape properties. With these minimal elements endless structures take shape, with no accents, no main issues, no side issues. I show a strong image of emptiness, of silence and peacefulness in a meditative atmosphere. My work does not point to existing realities, nor is it a picture of that reality. There are no statements, no meanings, symbols or messages. My work does not pretend to be more that itself: a composition of forms. That is why my work matches best with definitions, that are being used defining “Concrete Art”. (the following text by Wim de Natris, Gallery de Natris, Nijmegen, Netherlands) Jan Hendriks (Tilburg 1946) has been educated as an artist at the Academy of Fine Arts Tilburg (now: Fontys Hogeschool voor de Kunsten) and at Academie Beeldende Vorming, Amsterdam (since 2015 Breitner Academy). He lives and works in Landsmeer, near Amsterdam. The term "concrete art" often refers to the work of Jan Hendriks. The expression was launched in 1930 by Theo van Doesburg, one of the founders of De Stijl in 1917. Van Doesburg saw a substantial distinction between someone's abstract art such as Kandinsky, which was intuitive and emotional and the abstract art as he sought. A way of expressing, which he called Concrete Art. Concrete Art was also abstract, but based on rational basis. Universal art that should be comprehensible to all. Hendriks does not like that kind of markings. 'I work with simple shapes and materials, cardboard, paper, wood, mdf, foam board, in simple rhythmic compositions ... ... Simple means a straight line, simpler than a plane, a square, simpler than a rectangle. Everything that is unnecessary may be gone. Simple also means white.
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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