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VAGUE Print

Stephane Dillies

Belgium

Open Edition Prints Available:
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Canvas

Canvas

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16 x 20 in ($179)

16 x 20 in ($179)

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White Canvas

White Canvas

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White ($160)

White ($160)

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$339

59 Views

9

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ABOUT THE ARTWORK
DETAILS AND DIMENSIONS
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This canvas represents a hijacked magazine cover. The model is wearing a mask, the name of the magazine has been changed from "VOGUE" to "VAGUE", a play on words in French describing the fact of successive waves of coronavirus. I could not miss this event and not illustrate it in my own way. The mod...

Year Created:

2021

Subject:
Medium:

Print, Giclee on Canvas

Rarity:

Open Edition

Size:

16 W x 20 H x 1.25 D in

Size with Frame:

17.75 W x 21.75 H x 1.25 D in

Ready to Hang:

Yes

Frame:

White

Canvas Wrap:

White Canvas

Packaging:

Ships in a Box

Delivery Cost:

Calculated at checkout.

Delivery Time:

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

Returns:

All Open Edition prints are final sale items and ineligible for returns. Visit our help section for more information.

Handling:

Ships in a box. Art prints are packaged and shipped by our printing partner.

Ships From:

Printing facility in California.

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Need more information?

Stephane Dillies is a figurative French painter born in April 1975 in France. Graduate of Fine Arts, he lives and works in Brussels and exhibited in France (Paris, Le Touquet, St Tropez) as in Belgium (Brussels, Mouscron). His paintings, of varying sizes, are executed from photographs (or photographics combinations) of trash bins found in differents streets of the world. His paintings are landscapes of modern streets, they are snapshots of our life and reveals the futility of our society... Stephane Dillies proposes an approach similar to hyperrealistic painters, except that he offers new issues of painting to spectators, rarely addressed elsewhere. His paintings of garbage reflects the world of insatiable consumption of our society. The themes that are particularly favored are waste, whether real (plastic bottles, soda cans, cardboard, paper) or symbolic (celebrities in alcohol & drugs, low-resolution images from the internet ... ). His paintings are modern vanities and they remind us of the famous Latin phrase "memento mori", "remember that you shall die" and that we'll all end up like soda cans, to scrap!

Artist Recognition
Artist featured in a collection

Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection

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