Category | Photography |
---|---|
artist | Denker, Martin |
year | 2005 |
Title | Neuromantischer S.I.P. |
size 1 |
Image carrier
80,0 x 152,1 cm
Frame: 85,7 x 157,8 cm |
material | C-Print (Diasec) |
edition | 6 copies, here No. 5 |
signature | Titled, dated, numbered and signed on verso: "Neuromantischer S.I.P." 2005 5/6 Martin Denker |
publication | - |
Provenance | Private Collection Germany |
Martin Denker Neuromantischer S.I.P. (2005)
- Unique - Mounted in a dark frame
- Chaos and order - landscape, emotions and blurring
- Master student of Thomas Ruff in Düsseldorf
- Assistant to Andreas Gursky until 2006
€5,900.00*
- The artwork is available immediately and can be viewed at any time in our gallery.
- Ready for shipment within 2 days.
- Free shipping within Germany.
Informations
condition
The Photography is in a very good state of preservation Minimal surface traces. |
artist
Martin Denker wurde 1976 in Hamburg geboren. Denker studierte von 2001 bis 2006 bei Thomas Ruff an der Kunstakademie Düsseldorf, wo er 2006 zum Meisterschüler wurde. Er arbeitete von 2002 bis 2006 als Assistent von Andreas Gursky. Martin Denker fertigt großformatige fotografische Panoramen. |
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Features and remarks
This is your opportunity to acquire a large-format photographic work by Martin Denker for your contemporary art collection.
The picture shows a nocturnal landscape: the blurred outlines of trees and tall lamps can be vaguely discerned. Everything is bathed in a surreal, violet light.
In the loneliness of the night, the human eye searches for familiar shapes; longing and romance like to join this feeling of yearning.
„In my artistic work, I deal with the relationship between chaos and order. The human eye favours order, while our thoughts tend to be chaotic: My earlier works were large-format panoramas consisting of countless fragments of incoherent information which, in their ‘all-over’ arrangement, formed a universal order out of the chaos of the pictorial narrative through deliberation: The rules of aestheticism slowly built up the order during the months-long arrangement of a particular work.
Martin Denker
The photograph mounted behind Diasec is mounted in a black shadow gap frame.