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George Pusenkoff
large Russian GLASNOST Moscow, Post Soviet Avant Garde Painting George Pusenkoff

1988

About the Item

GEORGE PUSENKOFF (RUSSIAN Born 1953), "New Life" 1988, mixed media (paint, ribbon, Metallic foil) on canvas, 160 x 200 cm (63 x 78 3/4 in.), signed and titled verso in Cyrillic, and dated on verso, George Pusenkoff, Russian painter and installation artist, spent most of his formative years in Moscow. In his early career, Puskenoff worked predominantly with acrylic, rendering vibrant forms at various stages of abstraction, though he gave them titles that anchored them in specific narrative contexts, often referencing historical (and art-historical) subject matter, as in Kidnapping of Europe (1988) and Bronzino, Ciccolina and Yves Klein (1992). Pusenkoff painted his first digital border in 1996, simulating the 8bit look of the first computerized windows. He continued to experiment with the visual language of the computer screen, at times using just the browser window bar as an abstracted geometrical form. He invokes famous icons of modern art such as Kazimir Malevich’s Black Square, Josef Albers’ Homage to the Square or Piet Mondrian’s reduced geometric paintings and transfers them into a new aesthetic. In 1996, Pusenkoff painted his version of Andy Warhol’s take on the iconic Renaissance Da Vinci original: his silk screened Mona Lisa (1999), surrounded by a browser box, became the basis for an ongoing, travelling installation, exhibited internationally in site-specific structures made up of repeating Mona Lisa modules. Pusenkoff's work has been exhibited internationally at venues including the State Russian Museum in St. Petersburg, Moscow's Museum of Modern Art, and the 2005 Venice Biennale. MUSEUMS AND PUBLIC COLLECTIONS: Art Collection Rockefeller University, New York, USA Ludwig Forum, Aachen, Germany Markisches Museum, Witten, Germany Museum Bochum, Bochum, Germany Ludwig Museum, Cologne, Germany Museum Ludwig, Koblenz, Germany Museum Ritter, Sammlung Marli Hoppe-Ritter, Waldenbuch, Germany State Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg Moscow Museum of Modern Art, Moscow Neues Museum, Weserburg, Bremen Museum of Cultural History, Osnabruck Jewish Museum, Westfalen Musée de La Poste, Paris PUBLIC COLLECTIONS: Bolschoj-Theater-Museum, Moscow Museum Ludwig in State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg State Russian Museum, St. Petersburg Museum of Modern Art, Moscow Foundation of Ministry of Culture, Moscow MIET ()Moscow Technical University), Zelenograd Museum Ludwig, Cologne; Germany Museum Ludwig, Koblenz; Germany Markisches Museum, Witten; Germany Judisches Museum Westfalen, Dorsten; Germany Museum RiOppe-Ritter, Waldenbuch/ Stuttgart; Germany Sammlung des Bundeslandes Hessen, Germany Sammlung des Bundesministeriums fur Arbeit, Berlin; Germany DaimlerBenz Collection, Stuttgart; Germany Nord LB Collection, Braunschweig, Germany Collection KfW Bank, Frankfurt /Main, Germany Collection Solomon Oppenheim Bank, Cologne, Germany Collection Deutsche Sparkassen Verlag, Stuttgart, Germany Collection Ernst & Jung, Stuttgart; Germany Collection of the community Synagogue, Cologne; Germany Collection of the Jewish Center for Culture and Art, Cologne, Germany Collection La Reserve, Geneva, Switzerland Stella Art Fondation, Moscow “Contemporary City”, Fondation, Moscow Art Collection Rockfeller University, New York, USA Art Collection of the Fondation of the Biennale di Venezia, Venice, Italy
  • Creator:
    George Pusenkoff (1953, Russian)
  • Creation Year:
    1988
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 63 in (160 cm)Width: 78.75 in (200 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
  • Gallery Location:
    Surfside, FL
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU38211701492

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Kevin Larmon, (American, b. 1955), 1985-1986, oil on canvas; hand signed, titled, and dated on the reverse Provenance: bear a Curt Marcos Gallery label verso This is one of a pair we are offering for sale Kevin Larmon (1955-) is an American artist and was assistant monitor of painting at Syracuse University. Kevin Larmon was born in Syracuse, New York in 1955. He grew up on a small horse farm. Larmon's mother was a school secretary while his father was a construction worker. He graduated from Binghamton University with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree and moved to New York City as an undergraduate senior, where he finished his schooling at the New York Studio School. In the late 1970s, Larmon played guitar for Mudmen, a three piece band in the East Village of New York City with Craig Gillis playing bass, Mike Caffes playing drums, and percussionist Jill Burkhart. Mudmen played in venues such as CBGB, Danceteria, A7 (bar), Pyramid Club, Mudd Club, and The Limelight. 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Kevin Larmon, (American, b. 1955), 1985-1986, oil on canvas; hand signed, titled, and dated on the reverse Provenance: bear a Curt Marcos Gallery label verso This is one of a pair we are offering for sale Kevin Larmon (1955-) is an American artist and was assistant monitor of painting at Syracuse University. Kevin Larmon was born in Syracuse, New York in 1955. He grew up on a small horse farm. Larmon's mother was a school secretary while his father was a construction worker. He graduated from Binghamton University with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree and moved to New York City as an undergraduate senior, where he finished his schooling at the New York Studio School. In the late 1970s, Larmon played guitar for Mudmen, a three piece band in the East Village of New York City with Craig Gillis playing bass, Mike Caffes playing drums, and percussionist Jill Burkhart. Mudmen played in venues such as CBGB, Danceteria, A7 (bar), Pyramid Club, Mudd Club, and The Limelight. Larmon started making still life paintings in 1979. He has also worked with atmospheric drawings and paintings since 1989, many of which are made on canvas or wood. In 2009, he began to paint his cell paintings. Larmon's paintings are built up through layers of collage and paint. Most famously, Larmon's work includes collages of gay male pornography that have been painted over with images that exist somewhere in between abstraction and form. These images are often anatomical. Conceptually, Larmon's work deals with issues such as the male body image and fascist culture. Similarly, Larmon's drawings on wood deal with ambiguously anatomical and abstracted forms. His work has been associated with the post-conceptualism and neo-conceptual art movements, which were prominent aspects of exhibitions at Gallery Nature Morte and with Tricia Collins and Richard Milazzo shaping the nature of painting after the rise of conceptual art. Larmon was also associated with Feature Inc., a gallery that was first established in Chicago in 1984. In August 1988, the gallery's director, known as Hudson, moved Feature Inc. to New York City. Larmon's first exhibition with Feature Inc. occurred in 1987 in Chicago, Illinois. Over the years, Hudson and Larmon would work together on many exhibitions. As a young artist, Larmon spent his Thursdays working to sustain Gallery Nature Morte together with the gallery owners, Alan Becher and Peter Nagy, when the gallery existed in New York City. Larmon was heavily influenced by his contemporaries at Gallery Nature Morte such as Robin Weglinski, Joel Otterson, and Steven Parrino. Other influential artists include Oliver Wasow, Robert Gober, Nancy Shaver, Carter Hodgkin, and Steven Wolfe. Larmon also drew inspiration from Rembrandt, Giorgio Morandi, Jackson Pollock, and Agnes Martin. During his time as a professor at Syracuse University, Larmon made an impact on many emerging artists including Deborah Roberts and Paul Weiner. Larmon participated in Aperto 86 at the 1986 Venice Biennale in Venice, Italy, where his paintings were exhibited at the Corderie at the Arsenal. From 1983–2013, Larmon was invited to exhibit in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York; Feature Inc, New York, New York; Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, Arizona; the University Art Museum at the University of California, Berkeley; the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, Connecticut; Weatherspoon Art Museum at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, North Carolina; Visual Arts Museum, New York, New York; the Morris Museum, Morristown, New Jersey; Cleveland Center for Contemporary Art, now the Museum of Contemporary Art Cleveland, Cleveland, Ohio; Aspen Art Museum, Aspen, Colorado; Jersey City Museum, Jersey City, New Jersey; and the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts at Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts. 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Natural Genre: From the Neutral Subject to the Hypothesis of World Objects took place at Florida State University Gallery & Museum in Tallahassee, Florida from Aug. 31-Sept. 30, 1984. Larmon was accompanied by artists Jane Bauman, Ericka Beckman, Alan Belcher, Gretchen Bender, Ross Bleckner, Tom Brazleton, Barry Bridgwood, Sarah Charlesworth, Carroll Dunham, Robert Garratt, Mark Innerst, Louise Lawler, Allan McCollum, Peter Nadin, Peter Nagy, Joseph Nechvatal, Steven Parrino, Louis Renzoni, Meyer Vaisman, Oliver Wasow, James Welling, David Wojnarowicz, Michael Zwack. Still Life With Transaction II: Former Objects, New Moral Arrangements, and the History of Surfaces took place at Galerie Jurka in Amsterdam during November 1984. 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2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings

Materials

Wood, Mixed Media

French Contemporary Art by Marie-Pierre Autonne - Le Feu Quotidien
By Marie-Pierre Autonne
Located in Paris, IDF
Acrylic & oil on wooden panel Marie-Pierre Autonne is a French artist born in 1960 who lives & works in Angers, France. She studied at Penninghen in Paris, France. She worked for se...
Category

2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings

Materials

Wood, Mixed Media

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