Images and text courteously supplied by the Centro Português de Serigrafia.

Vladimir Velickovic

Karton

$780.00

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Vladimir Velickovic, a Serbian artist based in Paris, is internationally recognized as a prominent name in 20th century art. He has been exhibiting individually since 1963, both in his home country and in some of Europe's most prominent galleries. His work can be placed within the realm of contemporary fantastic expressionism, with its prestigious predecessors perhaps being Bosch, Bocklin, or Goya's black paintings - all heralds of the apocalypse, a way to exorcise ancestral fears and ghosts. Velickovic portrays the darkness of a human condition devoid of the original divine breath that rescues it from nothingness and returns it to the luminous transfiguration that belongs to it. The current serigraphy on canvas is part of the theater of his dramatic scenes of torture and terror, intensely enveloped in dark, fiery tones with cosmic resonance. It prefigures an Apocalypse that unfolds in a thousand slow-motion images capturing the fantastic reverse side of the atrocious reality of which we are passive witnesses.

Vladimir Velickovic

Born in 1935 in Belgrade, Serbia, the artist graduated in Architecture from the Faculty of Architecture at the University of Belgrade. From 1983 to 2000, they taught Painting and Drawing at the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux Arts in Paris. Having lived and worked in Paris since 1966, the artist was a member of the French Academy of Fine Arts and the Serbian Academy of Sciences and Arts since 1984. They were honored with the highest French decoration in the field of culture and art, Commandeur dans l 'Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. Having exhibited extensively worldwide, Velickovic demonstrated in their recent works a sharp relationship with the human condition and the global reality. As they themselves stated, "I have always painted what man was capable of doing to man." Expressiveness in their work is achieved through the representation of dramatic situations, bodies in tension with quick and spontaneous drawings where color - or its absence - plays a significant role. They won the first painting prize at the Paris Biennale in 1965 and represented Yugoslavia at the Venice Biennale in 1972. Their work is represented at the George Pompidou Center in France, the Museum of Modern Art in the USA, among other important collections. They passed away on August 29, 2019, in Croatia.
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Additional information

Artist

Vladimir Velickovic

Color

Gray, Lavender, Silver

Date

2009

Editor

Centro Português de Serigrafia

Format

Medium

Image Size (in)

19.9 x 18.9 in

Total Size (in)

19.9 x 18.9 in

Orientation

Landscape

Print Run

99

Technique

Screen print

Style

Uncategorized

Framed

No