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VIEW IN MY ROOM

Hey Tube Top Print

Peter Cunis

United States

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About The Artwork

Acrylic paint, gold (imitation) metal leaf and varnish on canvas. Metal hanger, wire hanger and original exhibition announcement card attached on back. Wood strip frame (lath), painted black, nailed to canvas edge is original to the piece. This was exhibited in Three of No Kind - Arno.Cunis.Fitschen, CBGB’s 313 Gallery in 1999. My work typically references figures, animals and situations - visualizations in an illusory context, unconventional mostly but not always. I find skeletal forms beautiful. These paintings were directed at exploring the end of time as we knew it and the downward path to extinction as humans and animals eventually perish in unforgiving circumstances. Gold leaf is applied to suggest tradition, heirarchy and illumination allowing light to play off it and to draw attention to those areas. Shipped wrapped in bubble wrap and securely boxed.

Details & Dimensions

Print:Giclee on Fine Art Paper

Size:8 W x 10 H x 0.1 D in

Size with Frame:13.25 W x 15.25 H x 1.2 D in

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Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

Currently living in Colorado. Medium/techniques: Drawing, painting (oil, alkyd and acrylic), wood burning (pyrography), ceramics, sculpture (assemblage, found object), collage. Artist Statement: “You have a unique personal vision”, was the reaction I got from a curator at an established Soho art gallery on West Broadway in New York City years back. He added, “Unfortunately, it’s not what our client base buys here”. It made sense. The day I was there, for their walk-in artwork/portfolio reviews, on the walls there were hanging very large photo-realistic oil paintings of horses. I thanked him for his suggestions and recommendations to take my work to some places in Greenwich Village. I like it when people are viewing my work and someone says, “I’ve never seen anything like this”. It’s both bad and good. Bad in the way that it might not directly connect with a movement, genre or artist. It doesn’t look like anything else out there. It’s good in the way that it might be considered idiosyncratic, perhaps unconventional; something new that might be referencing historical aspects, or not. I’m going for permanence and durability. From ceramic and metal to pyrography (wood burning) to paintings with or without gold leaf to assemblages including, or not, found objects. Figures, animals (intact, partial or skeletal), places and situations - visualizations in an illusory context.

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