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Saatchi-Gallery's Articles in Arts & Entertainment

  • Most Famous Art Museums around the World
    Museums collect and care for objects of scientific, artistic, or historical importance and make them available for public viewing through exhibits that may be permanent or temporary. Large museums are located in major cities throughout the world and more local ones exist in small cities.
  • Most Famous Art Museums around the World
    Museums collect and care for objects of scientific, artistic, or historical importance and make them available for public viewing through exhibits that may be permanent or temporary. Large museums are located in major cities throughout the world and more local ones exist in small cities.
  • Art portfolios at Saathi Gallery
    At Saatchi Gallery all Primary and Secondary schools are now able to create school profiles and display artwork created by all pupils between 4-18 years old. The portfolio of an artist plays an essential role in deciding the success of the artist and evaluating the business. An impressive art portfolio can ensure the acceptance by renowned art colleges and win scholarships for the artist.
  • National and international art fairs at Saatchi Gallery
    Art Fair Organisers have free to many art fairs. As Fine Art Fair Frankfurt – Germany, Frieze Art Fair – London, United Kingdom, Art Cologne – Köln Germany, The Armory Show - New York City etc.., United States Art Fairs are trade style sales events, held (usually) under one roof, Art Fairs are a great place to both buy and sell .
  • Art Colleges around the World
    Art Schools and Colleges art the colloquial term for any educational institution with a primary focus on the visual arts. We can gain education many more university as Yale University, Harvard University, California Institute of the Arts etc...
  • Art Museums around the World
    Museums collect and care for objects of scientific, artistic, or historical importance and make them available for public viewing. At Saatchi Gallery you can see the List of Main Art Museums around the World. As National Gallery – London, Tate Modern – London, Guggenheim Museum - New York etc.
  • Martina Steckholzer Artworks, Paintings and Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    Martina Steckholzer’s paintings offer a poetic ambience suggesting an infinite nothingness of space. Working from video footage filmed in art galleries, air fairs, studios, and museums, she isolates frames that capture the in-between spaces, unusual angles, and overlooked vantages of familiar generic places.
  • Marc Swanson Paintings and Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    Marc Swanson’s work examines the notion of masculine identity through a variety of media ranging from film, to sculpture, installation, and painting. Reconciling queer sensibility with the ultra conservatism of rural folk arts, Swanson’s Psychic Studies approaches themes of power, spirituality and tradition through an aesthetic of heightened sensuality.
  • Li Songsong Paintings at the Saatchi Gallery
    Li Songsong, a young artist in the 70s, has been in recent years investigating the relation between public images and their transposition onto canvas. In the shift to painting these pictures, which are mainly old photos related to historical characters and facts, he hasn’t protracted the cognitive style as for some previous artists’ practice of criticizing, exposing, questioning, or satirizing and propagandizing about a certain historical period, but has used a kind of imagery enacting an object
  • Jorg Immendorff Paintings, Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    Jorg Immendorff presents a canvas divided in three parts: labour, knowledge and possibility. His central figure, a goddess-like woman embodying an owl of wisdom, is the icon nurture and virtue, radiant against the bleak background of storm clouds and darkness.
  • Clayton Brothers Paintings and Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    Clayton Brothers are Back In The Swing of Things with a brand new album and a brand new record label. Brothers John and Jeff, the former on bass and the latter on saxophone, are two of the most prolific musicians in mainstream jazz. Also part of the celebrated, Clayton-Hamilton Big Band Orchestra, the siblings have earned their esteemed reputation with a number of top selling recordings and sold out concert dates around the world, not to mention guest appearances and arrangements on records by e
  • Sara VanDerBeek Paintings and Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    Sara VanDerBeek's adventures in set-up photography and appropriation embrace transparency and disclosure. Her works have mysteries, but their effects seem constructed before our eyes and are easily disassembled; the elements remain discreet. Ms. VanDerBeek knocks together little sculptural armatures and then photographs them, creating modernist allegories.
  • Kati Heck Artworks, Paintings and Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    Kati Heck approaches painting as a cacophony of pre-fab languages. Her canvases give the illusion of collage: stylistically blending photorealism, illustration, cartoon, and expressive painterly gestures, and incorporating their associative references of porn, instructional manuals, humour, and art history.
  • David Noonan Paintings, Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    David Kordansky Gallery is pleased to present the first Los Angeles solo exhibition by the London based, Australian born artist David Noonan. Historical imaginations, invented memories, bohemianism and late 20th century British theatre inspire David Noonan’s installation of large-scale screen prints, collages and bronze sculptures.
  • Anne Hardy Paintings and Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    Ann Hardy is best known for her detailed paintings done in a primitive style. The Sierra Foothills, the historical buildings and lore of this area have constantly inspired her art. Her paintings of local scenes are filled with nostalgia and whimsy, reminding us of "good old days.” And while most of these paintings are done in oil, occasionally Ann works with watercolors in a much looser manner than the intricate primitives.Anne Hardy’s photographs invite glimpses into imaginary places, each sugg
  • Andy Collins Paintings at the Saatchi Gallery
    Andy Collins's paintings are models of visual perfection. Approaching painting with a minimalist's fetishism, Collins hones his canvases to the simplest and boldest statements to capitalise on the power of suggested form. Working from photos, Andy Collins removes the subject, focussing instead on the evocative possibility of implied image.
  • Tal R Paintings, Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    The art of Tal R, a Danish painter and environmental artist, defies concepts and definition. His work tests the viewers' desire to recognise objects and things. Tal R's works are rich in themes that remotely remind one of something - but one cannot tell exactly what. Born in Israel in 1967, Tal R takes his themes from everyday life. He does not follow the traditions of art history too strictly and according to his own words, he rarely goes to art museums.
  • Ryan McGinley Paintings and Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    Ryan McGinley about his rowdy teen years growing up in New Jersey and raising hell in Manhattan. "I was just skateboarding and snowboarding with my homies, and girls weren't really that big a part of my life.
  • Peter Coffin Paintings at the Saatchi Gallery
    Coffin's work encourages the viewer to negotiate alternative modes of consciousness and acknowledge the subjectivity of science. The centerpiece of the exhibition is a greenhouse installed inside the gallery as a performance space in which musicians and sound artists communicate with plants.
  • David Harrison Paintings and Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    David Harrison's paintings are very odd - even eccentric - and very English. There are a few fairy folk in there, along with the great crested grebes, the barn owls, the scrupulously detailed butterflies, the bowler-hatted urban fox. A long-tailed tit feeds her clutch, nested in the eye socket of a grinning human skull.
  • Andrea Lehmann Artworks, Paintings and Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    Anna Klinkhammer, the painter Andrea Lehmann has filled a small closet with paintings – even on the ceiling – which simulate a cosmos reminiscent of a stage set. The small room is the heart of her exhibition “Stuffed Diamonds.
  • Thomas Zipp Paintings, Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    Thomas Zipp develops fantasy scenarios verging on the eccentric and theatrical. Garnering inspiration from art history, politics, philosophy, and popular culture, Zipp uses unlikely combinations of sources and genres to trigger a sense of familiarity within the absurd.
  • Martina Steckholzer Paintings and Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    Martina Steckholzer’s paintings offer a poetic ambience suggesting an infinite nothingness of space. Working from video footage filmed in art galleries, air fairs, studios, and museums, she isolates frames that capture the in-between spaces, unusual angles, and overlooked vantages of familiar generic places.
  • Jorg Immendorff Artworks, Paintings and Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    Jorg Immendorff, who studied with Joseph Beuys during the 1960s, has been more a satiric conceptualist than a painter of primal feeling. His huge "Cafe Deutschland" paintings, which set elaborate allegories of German politics and culture in nightclub interiors, made him famous in America in the 1980s.
  • Johannes Wohnseifer Paintings and Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    Johannes Wohnseifer presents the fictitious elements of an attempted assassination. Based on the story of the man who tried to kill president Ronald Reagan - John Hinckley – it presents him as pleading 'not guilty' based on the fact that he saw the movie 'Taxi Driver' by Martin Scorsese so many times that it was an 'Irresistible Impulse' for him to try to kill the president of the United States.
  • Isa Genzken Paintings at the Saatchi Gallery
    Isa Genzken as a traditional sculptor, along with the usual remarks concerning the heterogeneity of her method and the surprising breaks between her various bodies of work, belong firmly to the topoi of her reception. Genzken's approach, which includes recourse to photography, video, film, collages, and collage books, does, it's true, represent a continuous examination of the classic themes of sculpture.
  • Zhang Dali Paintings and Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    Zhang Dali's intention throughout his body of work is to call attention to the changes taking place in Chinese society primarily due to the destruction of long standing communities. He wants to enter into a dialogue with his compatriots whom he sees as becoming increasingly estranged as the drive towards modernisation continues. His early graffiti work can still be seen all over the Chinese capital.
  • Wang Guangyi Paintings at the Saatchi Gallery
    Wang Guangyi’s paintings combine the ideological power of communist propaganda with the seductive allure of advertising. Juxtaposing revolutionary images with consumer logos, Wang’s canvases provocate with their duplicitous message, highlighting the conflict between China’s political past and commercialised present.
  • Liu Wei Artworks, Paintings and Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    Liu Wei’s practice is uniquely varied. Working in video, installation, drawing, sculpture, and painting, there is no stylistic tendency which ties his work together. Rather Liu perceives the artist’s function as a responsibility of unmitigated, uncensored expression, tied to neither ideology nor form. Throughout Liu’s work lies an engagement with peripheral identity in the context of wider culture.
  • Li Songsong Paintings and Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    Li Songsong, a young artist in the 70s, has been in recent years investigating the relation between public images and their transposition onto canvas. In the shift to painting these pictures, which are mainly old photos related to historical characters and facts, he hasn’t protracted the cognitive style as for some previous artists’ practice of criticizing, exposing, questioning, or satirizing and propagandizing about a certain historical period, but has used a kind of imagery enacting an object
  • Li Qing Paintings, Exhibitions at the Saatchi Gallery
    Li Qing is one of China’s current young talents. Li Qing has a very distinctive style of his own, and is part of a new Chinese generation of painters.Li Qing (born in 1981 in Zhejiang province) is a graduate student at China Academy of Art and one of the representatives of this new generation. Over the last few years his art has been included many important exhibitions and rewarded several grants and awards, due to his excellence of performance - the mastery of refined and personal technique, th
  • Stefan Kürten - Paintings and Exhibitions - The Saatchi Gallery
    Stefan Kurten's painting Long Time Now, 2002, I suddenly thought of an old children's-book illustration for a long-unremembered nursery rhyme: "Little Jack Homer sat in a corner, / Eating his Christmas pie"--that one. The artist had imagined a small boy sitting scrunched on the floor in a corner, gazing wonderingly at a pie he held on his lap.
  • Jonas Burgert - Paintings and Exhibitions - The Saatchi Gallery
    An exhibition about death may not sound all that enticing. Nonetheless, 'Tod', the fourth in the 'Fraktale' series of contemporary art exhibitions mounted by Jonas Burgert and Ingolf Keiner in Berlin, is likely to prove a big popular success.
  • Ivan Morley - Paintings - The Saatchi Gallery
    Ivan Morley's paintings are inspired by the frontiersman's lore of scrappy, dried-out California towns with names like San Gabriel, El Monte, and Tehachapi. Such locales and their all-but-forgotten (and possibly artist-fabricated) histories--if you can call tales of memorable cockfights and observations on the behavior of squirrels histories-seem unlikely sources of inspiration.
  • Christoph Ruckhäberle - Artworks, Paintings and Exhibitions - The Saatchi Gallery
    Christoph Ruckhaberle approaches figurative painting from a purely formalist standpoint. His elaborate configurations don’t strive to depict narrative, but rather offer perverse pleasure in the idiosyncrasy of their construction.
  • Tom McGrath - Paintings and Exhibitions - The Saatchi Gallery
    McGrath paints for an audience accustomed to seeing references to pop culture and appropriated imagery in serious art - not the case when Warhol silkscreened newspaper photos of car crashes onto canvas - which is to say that irony is not the point here. The sensibility is wry, but high-minded.Painting from the democratic, almost childlike vantage point of a car passenger seat, the artist uses cool, neutral tones of beige, grey and brown to create an atmosphere of detached melancholy.
  • Tal R - Paintings and Exhibitions - The Saatchi Gallery
    Tal R has a distinctive way of explaining his paintings. "I constantly have this hot-pot boiling and I throw all kinds of material into it," he told an interviewer some time ago. More recently "I do painting a bit like people make a lunch box.
  • Michael Raedecker - Paintings - The Saatchi Gallery
    Michael Raedecker's flowers have a subtle quality of unparalleled grace captured in a glow of intellectual order and mathematical refinement. He presents a canvas and a half as one: a classical and elegant subject doubled, like gliding seamlessly from one film still to the next.
  • Martina Steckholzer - Paintings - The Saatchi Gallery
    Martina Steckholzer uses as a source for her paintings, video footage which she films in exhibition halls, museums, art fairs and artist’s studios - all places where art is seen or made. The filming is sometimes random where she moves the camera around the space without looking through the lens and sometimes more specific when she points the camera at something she finds interesting.
  • Christian Holstad - Artworks, Paintings and Exhibitions - The Saatchi Gallery
    Holstad is interested in cognition, in particular the shifty relationships between touch, neurology, and sublimer states. Investigating these, he's developed a unique art practice, one that emphasizes its own meditative processes.
  • Wilhelm Sasnal A German Artist at The Saatchi Gallery
    Wilhelm Sasnal makes paintings in response to the abundance of imagery that emerged in Eastern Europe after the fall of communism. No two Sasnal paintings ever look alike: he makes pop paintings, naturalistic paintings and abstracts. Some of his works look like still lifes, others like street scenes or record labels.
  • Thomas Scheibitz A German Artist at The Saatchi Gallery
    Thomas Scheibitz's vast canvases can be an unsettling experience: the brightly colored surfaces of his paintings manage simultaneously to convey unbridled energy and leave one inexplicably cold. It is precisely this paradox that enables the German artist to so successfully evoke the malaise of contemporary culture.
  • Marlene Dumas A German Artist at The Saatchi Gallery
    Marlene Dumas presents a corruption of innocence. Her portrayal of a young child with its clothes lifted over its head immediately gives way to dark thoughts of sexuality and exploitation. The controversy isn't in the images Marlene Dumas paints, but in the way they're subverted by an implied knowingness, a blatant confrontation with a natural reality and its discomforts.Marlene Dumas makes paintings with no concept of the taboo.
  • Luc Tuymans A German Artist at The Saatchi Gallery
    Luc Tuymans's paintings delve into the inner workings of how mythology is created. The reality of Luc Tuymans's work is almost 'twee', pleasing images of a lampshade or leopard-skin rug pass quite comfortably as aesthetic totems; it's only their cognitive association with the Holocaust, or atrocities of the Belgian Congo, that encapsulates the true banality of evil - the unspeakable horror in a teacup, the monstrous potential of an empty bath.
  • Johannes Wohnseifer A German Artist at The Saatchi Gallery
    Johannes Wohnseifer’s paintings hijack ready-made cultural signifiers and reassemble them as invented logos. Both comically absurd and ideologically threatening, his paintings infuse the frivolity of advertising with an underlying propaganda and cultural hierarchy.
  • German Artist John Stezaker at The Saatchi Gallery
    John Stezaker’s work re-examines the various relationships to the photographic image: as documentation of truth, purveyor of memory, and symbol of modern culture.
  • German Artist Jeppe Hein at The Saatchi Gallery
    eppe Hein’s sculpture and installations explore the relationship between viewer and artwork. Using the minimalist aesthetic of the archetypical cube, Hein’s Shaking Cube is both sculpture and mechanical object. Framed by an invisible field of motion sensors, the work is impelled by the movements of the viewer.
  • German Artist David Harrison at The Saatchi Gallery
    Harrison is an artist attracted to the day-to-day oddities that are often overlooked by most people. His paintings are populated by fantastical characters and wildlife placed in eerie, otherworldly settings. Taking traditional subjects of landscape and myth the artist creates magical tales that are relevant to our time and make strange our relationship to the natural world.
  • German Artist Andrea Lehmann at The Saatchi Gallery
    Andrea Lehmann’s Diamant Technik presents a dream-like adventure scene broadcasting both individual and collective desire. Sourcing her material from the internet, as well as her own imagination, Lehmann draws on the style of Japanese animation to encompass an exotic blend of kitsch naiveté and hyper-real sophistication.
  • German Artist Alice Könitz at The Saatchi Gallery
    Konitz has often employed models and maquettes as a means of interrogating space, and even her fully realized works often feel provisional. Based on a maquette on view in the gallery's back room, the show's capacious if spare centerpiece, Mall Sculpture (all works 2006).
  • German Artist Thomas Helbig at The Saatchi Gallery
    Thomas Helbig’s abstractions strive to capture the essence of power. Within his raw canvases, Helbig alludes to the unwieldy forces of nature, and the representational modes used to harness its vastness. Stylistically, Helbig recycles art history, implicating visual language as reflective of ideology.
  • German Artist Thomas Helbig at The Saatchi Gallery
    Thomas Helbig’s abstractions strive to capture the essence of power. Within his raw canvases, Helbig alludes to the unwieldy forces of nature, and the representational modes used to harness its vastness. Stylistically, Helbig recycles art history, implicating visual language as reflective of ideology.
  • German Artist Jessica Stockholder at The Saatchi Gallery
    Born in Seattle in 1959, Stockholder grew up in Vancouver, British Columbia. She studied in the 1970s with sculptor Mowry Baden, whose architectural constructions from that period suggest bridges or passageways and other spaces through which the spectator moves.
  • German Artist Jessica Stockholder at The Saatchi Gallery
    Born in Seattle in 1959, Stockholder grew up in Vancouver, British Columbia. She studied in the 1970s with sculptor Mowry Baden, whose architectural constructions from that period suggest bridges or passageways and other spaces through which the spectator moves.
  • German Artist David Noonan at The Saatchi Gallery
    Noonan presents a fabricated vision that is awesome in its complexity. Using the liturgy of art itself as a departure point for invention, Noonan conceives his work as ‘documentation’ of plausible performances: his cast of characters are positioned as participators in highly elaborate artworks, invoking covert and futuristic ritual.
  • Selected Works by Thomas Houseago at The Saatchi-Gallery
    The Saatchi Gallery is pleased to present Both Ends Burning, an exhibition

    of new work by Amy Bessone, Thomas Houseago, Matthew Monahan and Lara Schnitger.
  • Sara VanDerBeek - A German Artist's photography and sculptures
    Sara VanDerBeek. View art work,selected exhibitions and paintings of artist

    Sara VanDerBeek at The Saatchi Gallery - London contemporary art gallery.
  • Katie Heck - a German Artist
    Kati Heck's History and Art work at Saatchi-Gallery
    Kati Heck approaches painting as a cacophony of pre-fab languages. Her
    canvases give the illusion of collage. Kati Heck. View art work,selected
    exhibitions and paintings of artist Kati Heck at The Saatchi Gallery -
    London contemporary art gallery.
  • Garth Weiser artists paintings and exhibitions
    selected Garth Weiser Exhibitions and his Artwork
    Weiser creates a space that accommodates disparate readings. One involves

    the imaginative wanderings of figures bunkered down in layers of geometry

    while another is tied to paint as a material embossed upon the canvas.
  • A German Artist - Eva Rothschild Paintings and Artwork
    Eva Rothschild is interested in un-systems of belief, non-systems, in how

    people move their 'spiritual' desires between different objects and

    traditions. Eva Rothschild. View art work,selected exhibitions and paintings

    of artist Eva Rothschild at The Saatchi Gallery - London contemporary art

    gallery.
  • About Dirk Skreber - A German Artist
    German artist Dirk Skreber works in sculpture, installation and painting.

    Ranging from the abstract to the representational, his work is concerned

    with the architecture of the hyperreal Dirk Skreber. View art work,selected

    exhibitions and paintings of artist Dirk Skreber at The Saatchi Gallery -

    London contemporary art gallery.
  • Zhang Xiaotao A Chinese expressionist artist
    Zhang Xiaotao was born on 1970 in Hechuan, Chongqing, China, he lives and works in Beijing and Chengdu, China. He is an artist full of enthusiasm and good at argument. He is so talkatively repelling that no one could plunge himself into the conversation you could also be able to read his articles about the paintings.
  • Joerg Immendorf A German expressionist artist
    A charismatic figure, Immendorff was known for his flamboyant lifestyle as well as oil his paintings, prints and sculptures that mixed surrealism with an element of satire.
  • Anne Hardy A German expressionist artist
    Anne Hardy’s photographs invite glimpses into imaginary places, each suggesting fictions of a very surreal nature. Working in her studio, Hardy builds each of her sets entirely from scratch; a labour intensive process of constructing a barren room, then developing its elaborate interior down to the most minute detail.
  • Till Gerhard selected artwork and Paintings
    Till Gerhard’s epic scenes of rural community are painted with supernatural intensity, alluding to a disquietly sinister corruption of Utopia. In Das Wir Gefuhl, Till Gerhard paints a coven of robed worshippers in ritual dance; oil wells dot the background like religious totems. Bathed in blinding celestial light, the figures haloed in salvation cast telling dark shadows. The surface of the painting is bespeckled with divine aura, infusing the scene with a joyous mysticism.
  • Silke Schatz selected artwork and Paintings
    Schatz presents works based on the architect Otto Haesler and an installation relating to her grandparents who lived in Celle. In the late 1920s until 1933 Otto Haesler, who was a pioneer of the “Neues Bauen”, started building his suburban colonies such as the Siedlung Georgsgarten, 1927 as well as villas, such as The Direktorenwohnhaus, 1931-32.
  • Thomas Zipp selected artwork and Paintings
    Thomas Zipp's latest exhibition, "EEEEEEE (God bless the Lord (Auch))," refers to the pseudonym under which Georges Bataille published The Story of the Eye in 1928. Apocalyptic, pornographic, and at times filled with wit, Zipp's "Schlaf-Bildern" (Sleep-Paintings) escort us through a field strewn with Bataillean imagery, a labyrinth of possibilities featuring flowers, bullets, asses, mountains, suns, and fish that look like zeppelins.
  • Jonathan Meese selected artwork and Paintings
    Jonathan Meese Is Mother Parsifal set the young artist alone against the well-over-five hours of Wagner's slow-moving epic in the vast scenery store-house of Berlin's Staatsoper Unter den Linden. There Meese performed three shows in March, with music piped in live from the new Eichinger and Barenboim production of Parsifal, which was playing simultaneously in the Staatsoper's main auditorium.
  • Jonas Burgert selected artwork and Paintings
    Jonas Burgert ist Maler. Er ist im westlichen Teil Berlins geboren und aufgewachsen. Seit diesem Jahr vertritt ihn die Hamburger Produzentengalerie, die Künstler wie Thomas Schütte, Candida Höfer, Marlene Dumas, aber auch den diesjährigen Vertreter Deutschlands auf der Venedig-Biennale.
  • Christoph Ruckhäberle selected artwork and Paintings
    Christoph Ruckhaberle’s leisurely scenes operate like dysfunctional stage plays. Cribbed from all the best bits of art history, he imbues his paintings with a contemporary newness of vivid patterns and design colours. His elaborate sets are backdrops of static energy against which his cast nonchalantly mingles: placid and bored, unaware of their own interaction with an expectant audience.
  • Stefan Kürten selected artwork and Paintings
    Stefan Kurten's scenes of an idyllic suburbia unleash the awesome wonder in the nature of small things. Overwhelming in their obsessive detail, Kurten's gardens and interiors become macrocosms of discovery, where pastoral homeliness unfolds as sublime infinity of repetitive shapes, patterns and textures.
  • Matthias Weischer selected artwork and Paintings
    The main themes of Matthias Weischer's work is the interior. Almost all his paintings are views of interiors. They show closed interior spaces with neither windows nor doors, sparsely furnished and decorated, and without a person to be seen in any of them. In the art of the past decades the subject of the interior was mainly of importance for installation art, for example, the works of Ilya Kabakov, Gergor Schneider and Christoph Büchel.
  • Ivan Morley selected artwork and Paintings
    Ivan Morley describes his paintings as “poetic myth objects”. Drawing from the Wild West ancestry of his hometown in California, Morley’s works – which range from folk-style illustration to full-fledged abstraction – combine fact and more than a little historical embellishment in their narrative motifs.
  • Eberhard Havekost selected artwork and Paintings
    Eberhard Havekost’s work explores the problems of painting in the media age. Painted from personal photos and video footage, his imagery is rendered to highlight the limits of its own mechanically reproduced distortion.
  • Daniel Richter selected artwork and Paintings
    Daniel Richter's paintings are elaborate in their deconstruction and recodification of art history. Drawing a wide range of reference from Goya, Munch, Ensor, to Immendorff and Doig, Richter offers a revisionist position for the crisis of painting in the 21st century.
  • About Peter Coffin - A German Artist
    Peter Coffin was born in Berkeley, California in 1972. His work is concerned with conceptual point of view and motivated by curiosity and the desire to connect with the kind of understanding that seems out of reach or which simply engenders further inquiry.
  • Sara VanDerBeek Exhibitions and sculptural paintings
    Sara VanDerBeek. View art work,selected exhibitions and paintings of artist Sara VanDerBeek at The Saatchi Gallery - London contemporary art gallery.
  • Marc Swanson Exhibitions and sculptural paintings
    Marc Swanson at The Saatchi-Gallery Marc Swanson's Fits and Starts is a sculpture of a life-size deer, entirely encrusted in rhinestone crystals.View art work,selected exhibitions and paintings of artist Marc Swanson at The Saatchi Gallery - London contemporary art gallery.
  • About Kevin Appel - A German Artist
    Kevin Appel’s paintings visually reassemble built environments as abstracted motifs where swatches wood grain, wallpaper, and Formica patterns overlap and collide in constellations of disordered perspective.
  • About Eva Rothschild - A German Artist
    Eva Rothschild's artistic practice includes wall pieces and video, in which she embroiders customary notions of abstraction, representation and decoration with models of longing and projects them on various social groups. Artistic and semantic yearnings are often intertwined in her works.
  • About Dirk Skreber - A German Artist
    Dusseldorf-based Dirk Skreber recently made his New York solo debut with a show consisting of three enormous oils (99 by 158 inches each) derived from magazine and Internet photographs, and a fourth, quite different canvas of the same size that related to a sculptural installation in the gallery's back room.
  • David Noonan: Films,Paintings and Exhibitions
    David Noonan’s disparate imagery collates to convey a transient sense of time and space that is both theatrical and strangely insular. David Noonan. View art work,selected exhibitions and paintings of artist David Noonan at The Saatchi Gallery - London contemporary art gallery.
  • Selected Artwork by Richard Wilson
    Richard Wilson is one of the foremost exponents of installation art working in the world today. His seminal work 20:50, a sea of reflective sump oil permanently installed in the Saatchi Collection, London, has been described as "one of the masterpieces of the twentieth century.
  • Selected Artwork by Thomas Helbig
    Thomas Helbig’s paintings approach abstraction with a quirky intimacy. Set in wonky hand-made frames, his canvases exude a contemplative authority, broaching high culture with folk craft. Reminiscent of the black forms of Robert Motherwell or Franz Kline, Maschine resurrects modernist principles of artistic autonomy, creating a unique platform in which Helbig engages with art and history in a personal way.
  • Selected Artwork by Kati Heck
    Katie Heck is often the protagonist in her work: she is the good fairy who, with her work and aura, offers to her fellows a magical potion meant to engender a change in their manner of thinking. Katie Heck’s work seems constructed from the colourful innocence of childhood. Aside from the often masterly painted and drawn figures, there also appear various comic-book heroes with whom she grew up.
  • Selected Artwork by Garth Weiser
    Garth Weiser compresses and conflates figural, landscape, and geometric elements to create paintings which rest in an enigmatic point between abstraction and representation.He mediates between the structure of an image and it’s meaning.
  • Selected Artwork by Agnieszka Brzezanska
    Agnieszka Brzezanska are on display through Aug. 4 at Art Gallery. The works focus on ambiguity and on the constant search for identity-as a woman and as an artist. Brzezanska was born in 1972 and graduated from the Fine Arts Academy in Warsaw in 1997. Her work marks all her metamorphoses, journeys and new experiences. The artist paints in oil, draws and takes photographs.
  • About Thomas Houseago -German Artist
    The Saatchi Gallery is pleased to present Both Ends Burning, an exhibition of new work by Amy Bessone, Thomas Houseago, Matthew Monahan and Lara Schnitger.
  • Kevin Appel - Artwork - The Saatchi Gallery
    Kevin Appel's interest has turned toward representing an illogical relationship between an iconic architectural representation of a home and its natural surroundings.Kevin Appel. View art work,selected exhibitions and paintings of artist Kevin Appel at The Saatchi Gallery - London contemporary art gallery.
  • David Noonan - ArtWork - The Saatchi-Gallery
    David Noonan’s disparate imagery collates to convey a transient sense of time and space that is both theatrical and strangely insular. David Noonan. View art work,selected exhibitions and paintings of artist David Noonan at The Saatchi Gallery - London contemporary art gallery.
  • Anne Hardy -ArtWork - The Saatchi-Gallery
    Anne Hardy’s photographs invite glimpses into imaginary places, each suggesting fictions of a very surreal nature. Working in her studio, Hardy builds each of her sets entirely from scratch
  • Thomas Houseago -ArtWork - The Saatchi-Gallery
    The Saatchi Gallery is pleased to present Both Ends Burning, an exhibition of new work by Amy Bessone, Thomas Houseago, Matthew Monahan and Lara Schnitger.
  • About Kevin Appel - German Artist
    Kevin Appel's interest has turned toward representing an illogical relationship between an iconic architectural representation of a home and its natural surroundings.Kevin Appel. View art work,selected exhibitions and paintings of artist Kevin Appel at The Saatchi Gallery - London contemporary art gallery.
  • About David Noonan - German Artist
    David Noonan’s disparate imagery collates to convey a transient sense of time and space that is both theatrical and strangely insular. David Noonan. View art work,selected exhibitions and paintings of artist David Noonan at The Saatchi Gallery - London contemporary art gallery.
  • German Artist - Anne Hardy
    Anne Hardy’s photographs invite glimpses into imaginary places, each suggesting fictions of a very surreal nature. Working in her studio, Hardy builds each of her sets entirely from scratch
  • Ryan McGinley selected artwork and Paintings
    Ryan McGinley’s photographs interact with the camera with a self-conscious candour that is at once shocking, banal, alluring and repulsive. The images exhibited at the Whitney show McGinley’s friends and lovers enacting the daily rituals of contemporary youth culture: they hang out, have sex, do drugs, go to gigs, and romp naked in the woods.
  • Kai Althoff selected artwork and Paintings
    Kai Althoff's soldiers are drawn with delicate stylised dandyism. Conveyed with refined nobility, debauchery and humanity become indistinguishable; cruelty is portrayed with an acute tenderness. Flattened to an almost decorative motif, Althoff’s scene reads like theatre.
  • John Stezaker selected artwork and Paintings
    John Stezaker’s work re-examines the various relationships to the photographic image: as documentation of truth, purveyor of memory, and symbol of modern culture. In his collages, Stezaker appropriates images found in books, magazines, and postcards and uses them as ‘readymades’. Through his elegant juxtapositions, Stezaker adopts the content and contexts of the original images to convey his own witty and poignant meanings.
  • Jessica Stockholder selected artwork and Paintings
    Stockholder has used everyday items and liberally applied paint to create distinctive sculpture-painting hybrids. A traveling survey of her sculptures goes on view this month at the Weatherspoon Art Museum by Frances Colpitt.
  • Jeppe Hein selected artwork and Paintings
    Jeppe Hein’s sculpture and installations explore the relationship between viewer and artwork. Using the minimalist aesthetic of the archetypical cube, Hein’s Shaking Cube is both sculpture and mechanical object. Framed by an invisible field of motion sensors, the work is impelled by the movements of the viewer.
  • Ena Swansea selected artwork and Paintings
    Ena Swansea’s paintings resides in her use of rich materials to create resounding psychological environments. Working in oil paint over a graphite ground, Swansea allows the unpredictable qualities of her media to clash with a physical tension. In World Wide Web, her silver-black surface has a metallic and dusty sheen, the uniquely gritty and greasy texture of the graphite both refracting and consuming light.
  • David Harrison selected artwork and Paintings
    Summary:- Harrison is an artist attracted to the day-to-day oddities that are often overlooked by most people. His paintings are populated by fantastical characters and wildlife placed in eerie, otherworldly settings. Taking traditional subjects of landscape and myth the artist creates magical tales that are relevant to our time and make strange our relationship to the natural world.
  • Wilhelm Sasnal selected artwork and Paintings
    Sasnal in a painter of the present day, his works often differ so much from each other that one could suppose they had been painted by numerous artists. However all of them share a common deep sensibility of the author which reflects both political, moral and aesthetic aspects of reality. In his works, Sasnal extends different feelings, emotions and events which he has experienced.
  • Thomas Scheibitz selected artwork and Paintings
    Thomas Scheibitz's vast canvases can be an unsettling experience: the brightly colored surfaces of his paintings manage simultaneously to convey unbridled energy and leave one inexplicably cold. It is precisely this paradox that enables the German artist to so successfully evoke the malaise of contemporary culture.
  • Martin Kippenberger selected artwork and Paintings
    Martin Kippenberger always went too far. Going too far was what the German artist did, in art and in life. It was said he once bought a dilapidated petrol station in Brazil and renamed it Gas Station Martin Boormann, after the Nazi war criminal.
  • Marlene Dumas selected artwork and Paintings
    Marlene Dumas was born in Cape Town and graduated from the University of Cape Town with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in 1975. She studied psychology in Holland for two years (1979--1980). Since then she has had numerous exhibitions and her reputation has steadily grown.
  • Luc Tuymans selected artwork and Paintings
    Luc Tuymans was expected to present paintings of images relating to 9/11 to coincide with the exhibition's theme of political and social engagement. What he decided to show was a giant still life. The sheer scale makes the contemplation of this painting almost impossible.
  • Hermann Nitsch selected artwork and Paintings
    Hermann Nitsch originally conceived and mounted at the French Cultural Centre in Milan. Based on Leonardo da Vinci's famous fresco (housed in the same city), Hermann Nitsch's performative response was finalised as an installation consisting of a table, surrounded by twelve pictures, and a large canvas symbolic of Christ.
  • Selected Artwork by Wilhelm Sasnal
    Sasnal in a painter of the present day, his works often differ so much from each other that one could suppose they had been painted by numerous artists. However all of them share a common deep sensibility of the author which reflects both political, moral and aesthetic aspects of reality. In his works, Sasnal extends different feelings, emotions and events which he has experienced.
  • Selected Artwork by Thomas Scheibitz
    Thomas Scheibitz's vast canvases can be an unsettling experience: the brightly colored surfaces of his paintings manage simultaneously to convey unbridled energy and leave one inexplicably cold. It is precisely this paradox that enables the German artist to so successfully evoke the malaise of contemporary culture.
  • Selected Artwork by Martin Kippenberger
    Martin Kippenberger always went too far. Going too far was what the German artist did, in art and in life. It was said he once bought a dilapidated petrol station in Brazil and renamed it Gas Station Martin Boormann, after the Nazi war criminal.
  • Marlene Dumas paintings and Exhibitions
    Marlene Dumas was born in Cape Town and graduated from the University of Cape Town with a Bachelor of Fine Arts in 1975. She studied psychology in Holland for two years (1979--1980). Since then she has had numerous exhibitions and her reputation has steadily grown.
  • Luc Tuymans paintings and Exhibitions
    Luc Tuymans was expected to present paintings of images relating to 9/11 to coincide with the exhibition's theme of political and social engagement. What he decided to show was a giant still life. The sheer scale makes the contemplation of this painting almost impossible.
  • About Michael Raedecker and his art
    Michael Raedecker’s paintings revel in the architecture of illusion. Each canvas explicitly details its unconventional method of making. Poured puddles of paint, tangled masses of yarn and intricately stitched details exist as self-contained gestures
  • Selected Artwork by Hermann Nitsch
    Hermann Nitsch originally conceived and mounted at the French Cultural Centre in Milan. Based on Leonardo da Vinci's famous fresco (housed in the same city), Hermann Nitsch's performative response was finalised as an installation consisting of a table, surrounded by twelve pictures, and a large canvas symbolic of Christ.
  • Christian Holstad's Biography and Exhibitions
    Christian Holstad carefully erases the ink from other areas to create ghostly, ambiguous voids, rendering their subjects – political figures, landscapes, interiors – deformed and isolated.
  • Martina Steckholzer's Biography and Exhibitions
    Martina Steckholzer’s paintings offer a poetic ambience suggesting an infinite nothingness of space. Working from video footage filmed in art galleries, air fairs, studios
  • About Artist Franz Ackermann Painting's
    Franz Ackermann describes his paintings as 'mental maps'. Each kaleidoscopic canvas readily depicts his experience of place. Franz Ackermann. View art work,selected exhibitions and paintings of artist Franz Ackermann at The Saatchi Gallery - London contemporary art gallery.
  • Ab,Biography and sculpturesout Artists Ellen Altfest artwork ,Biography and sculptures
    Ellen Altfest’s work is an exercise of extreme and deliriously inefficient will seeking both accuracy and metaphor.View art work,selected exhibitions and paintings of artist Ellen Altfest at The Saatchi Gallery -
    London contemporary art gallery.
  • From the Catalogue, Christoph Schmidberger Lavender Fields Forever
    Christoph Schmidberger belongs to a generation of younger artists whose pictorial conceptions and paintings continue to write the chapter of realism.
  • Banks Violette here explores a recent horrific case
    Banks Violette has made melting black drum kits and small stages; he paints horrific skulls, mournful faces, and galloping white horses too.
  • About german Artist Thoralf Knobloch Biography and his Exhibitions at the saatchi-Gallery
    Thoralf Knobloch works the subject and any suggestion of narrative become secondary to the formal elements of the painting View art work,selected exhibitions and paintings of artist Thoralf Knobloch at The Saatchi Gallery - London contemporary art gallery.
  • German Artist Stefan Kurten's Art work and Piantings at the saatchi-Gallery
    Stefan Kurten’s scenes of suburban idyll radiate with pastoral pleasure, thinly concealing neurotic obsession.Stefan Kurten. View art work,selected exhibitions and paintings of artist Stefan Kurten at The Saatchi Gallery - London contemporary art gallery.
  • German Artist Martin Kippenberger's Art work and Piantings at the saatchi-Gallery
    Martin Kippenberger developed an elaborate concept of aesthetics where the trivial and the subcultural became as influential on his working practice as the masterpieces of art history
  • German Artist Andrea Lehmann's Art work and Piantings at the saatchi-Gallery
    Andrea Lehmann has filled a small closet with paintings – even on the ceiling – which simulate a cosmos reminiscent of a stage set View art work,selected exhibitions and paintings of artist Andrea Lehmann at The Saatchi Gallery - London contemporary art gallery.

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