Picture "I Want To Celebrate, But For What" (2024) (Unique piece)

Picture "I Want To Celebrate, But For What" (2024) (Unique piece)
Quick info
unique piece | signed | acrylic on canvas | unframed | size 110 x 136 cm
Detailed description
Picture "I Want To Celebrate, But For What" (2024) (Unique piece)
Acrylic on canvas, 2024, signed. Unframed. Size stretched on stretcher frame 110 x 136 cm.
Producer: ARTES Kunsthandelsgesellschaft mbH, Bödekerstraße 13, 30161 Hannover, Deutschland E-Mail: info@kunsthaus-artes.de
About Peter Grosz
The artist Peter Grosz, born in Dresden, Germany, in 1959, studied at the Academy of Fine Arts in Dresden from 1985 to 1988. After political imprisonment in the GDR, he emigrated to the Federal Republic in 1988.
Grosz always works in a processual manner: he cuts, tears, exposes and applies, a collage as a kind of path to image discovery.
Works by the painter can be found in numerous private and public collections, such as the Berlin Senate and the Bayerische Staatsgemäldesammlung in Munich.
Term for paintings and sculptures that are detached from representational depiction, which spread across the entire western world and parts of the eastern world from around 1910 onwards in ever new stylistic variations. The Russian painter Wassily Kandinsky, born in 1866, is considered the founder of abstract art. Other important artists of abstract art are K.S. Malewitsch, Piet Mondrian, and others.
A one-of-a-kind or unique piece is a work of art that has been personally created by the artist. It exists only once due to the type of production (oil painting, watercolours, drawing, etc.).
In addition to the classic unique pieces, there exist the so-called "serial unique pieces". They present a series of works with the same colour, motif and technique, manually prepared by the same artist. The serial unique pieces are rooted in "serial art", a type of modern art, that aims to create an aesthetic effect through series, repetitions and variations of the same objects or themes or a system of constant and variable elements or principles.
In the history of arts, the starting point of this trend was the work "Les Meules" (1890/1891) by Claude Monet, in which for the first time a series was created that went beyond a mere group of works. The other artists, who addressed to the serial art, include Claude Monet, Piet Mondrian and above all Gerhard Richter.