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bazevian animalFRENCH SCHOOL Dachshund Fashion Week Mondrian Chut les Barbizons!2025
2025
$1,733.46
$7,053.4075% Off
£1,293.72
£5,264.1275% Off
€1,450
€5,90075% Off
CA$2,391.18
CA$9,729.6375% Off
A$2,615.56
A$10,642.6275% Off
CHF 1,377.16
CHF 5,603.6375% Off
MX$31,227.10
MX$127,06275% Off
NOK 17,552.14
NOK 71,419.0475% Off
SEK 16,056.02
SEK 65,331.3875% Off
DKK 11,046.62
DKK 44,948.3075% Off
About the Item
☀️Dachshund Fashion Week Mondrian☀️
In the artistic world, animals have always been key protagonists in expressing the power and beauty of the wild.
Artists often use animals as symbols to convey deeper messages. For instance, the serpent has long been associated with temptation and sin in Western art. It frequently appears in biblical scenes such as the fall of Adam and Eve or the temptation of Jesus in the desert.
On the other hand, some animals are elevated to the status of deities or hold sacred significance in certain cultures. The elephant, for example, is revered in Asia for its wisdom and tranquil strength. In Asian art, it is often depicted with delicacy and finesse to symbolize prosperity and happiness.
The eagle, by contrast, is a symbol of power and freedom in many cultures around the world. Its majestic flight inspires admiration and respect. Painters like John James Audubon sought to capture this grandeur by portraying the bird of prey with remarkable scientific precision.
The symbolism of animals can also vary across historical periods. In medieval Europe, for instance, the lion was considered a royal emblem embodying the nobility and strength of the reigning monarch. Kings were often depicted alongside a roaring lion to assert their undeniable authority.
It is worth noting that attitudes toward animals have evolved over time. In the past, animals were often depicted as hunting trophies or symbols of human domination over the animal kingdom. Today, many artists highlight the importance of preserving biodiversity and promoting respect for animals.
They carry a complex symbolic language and evoke a multitude of emotions and meanings. Whether through their raw beauty or profound symbolism, these works remind us of how rich and inspiring the animal world is for human imagination.
Technique: oil, acrylic, glue, ink on old book pages on wooden frame 100x73cm ■■ 39.4 x28.7inch
⭐Sustainability⭐: Wooden frame is made by the artist by recycling old books. In an ecological approach, each packaging is tailor-made and is itself from a recycling network.
⏩》R E A D Y -- T O -- H A N G《⏪
🟢 → Original signed work. Certificate of authenticity included.
🟢 → Protection for shipping (plywood, foam, thick cardboard)
🟢 → International Delivery Company – DHL/UPS/FEDEX 3-6days from France to USA.
This imaginative and witty artwork presents a dachshund standing in profile, depicted with striking clarity and personality. The dog’s body is visually transformed into a patchwork design inspired by the geometric abstraction of Piet Mondrian. This fusion between realism and modernist abstraction creates a powerful contrast that is both humorous and intellectually engaging.
The dachshund itself is rendered with careful attention to anatomy and texture. Its long, elongated body, characteristic of the breed, naturally lends itself to the horizontal format. The artist captures the glossy black and tan coat through layered brushstrokes that simulate fur texture and subtle light reflection. The animal’s facial expression is alert and slightly curious, giving the dog a sense of dignity and awareness despite the playful context. The highlight in the eye and the gentle shading along the snout enhance the impression of a living subject rather than a stylized symbol.
Covering the dog’s torso is the unmistakable pattern reminiscent of Mondrian’s iconic aesthetic: blocks of saturated primary colors red, blue, and yellow outlined by rigid black lines and interspersed with white rectangles. Some of the white areas even contain printed text, subtly nodding to the collage techniques of mixed-media modern art. This geometric design contrasts sharply with the organic curvature and softness of the dog’s anatomical form. The juxtaposition creates a humorous tension, as if nature and abstraction are temporarily inhabiting the same body.
The background consists of pages from printed text, likely pages from a book arranged to form a continuous surface. This textual backdrop serves multiple artistic purposes. First, it provides a neutral yet visually rich texture that avoids overshadowing the central figure. Second, it reinforces the mixed-media nature of the piece, situating it within a contemporary collage-influenced tradition. Third, it establishes a metaphorical dimension: the dog becomes a character walking across a landscape of language, culture, or narrative. The splatters of black ink that dot the background add movement and break the rigidity of the printed text, suggesting spontaneity and artistic intervention.
The composition is perfectly balanced. The dog occupies the entire horizontal space, creating a stable, linear structure. The background text is evenly distributed, and the floor area beneath the dachshund provides grounding, ensuring the animal does not appear to float. The meticulous realism of the head and legs anchors the viewer in representation, while the colorful abstraction at the center invites conceptual interpretation.
Thematically, the painting connects worlds that rarely meet: the natural charm of animals, the intellectual rigour of modernist abstraction, and the materiality of printed culture. The dachshund becomes a canvas within a canvas, carrying art history on its back. The Mondrian pattern may symbolize order imposed on organic life, or the playful intrusion of high art into everyday subjects.
Emotionally, the work is delightful and intriguing. Its humor does not undermine its sophistication; instead, it demonstrates how art can be both accessible and thought-provoking. The viewer is invited to appreciate the technical skill, the clever stylistic references, and the overall charm of a dog transformed into a walking homage to one of the pioneers of abstraction.
Overall, the painting succeeds as a vibrant, contemporary, and conceptually rich celebration of creativity, blending realism, humor, and art-historical dialogue into a single memorable image.
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Discover my work on Channel 4 UK in the TV Show "Huges Home" with Hugh Dennis _ Episode 4
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Bazévian Delacapucinière is a French artist whose works have appeared in numerous exhibitions and publications in Europe, America and Asia.
My work focuses on oxidized images from the collective memory of the 20th century. According to Aristotle, from memory to reminiscence, it is necessary to reactivate images through the imagination to know their sensitive power. Consequently, the gaze (of portraits) becomes power, texture becomes light. Finally, this transposition of images becomes my individual memory.
Bazévian Delacapucinière is an artist, now based in France who painted vibrant figurative painting with vivid colors. Norwegian, Brasilian, Korean, Bazévian spent 10 years on the road, meeting a lot of artists and people. Bazévian focuses mostly on portraits, because the face is a vital part of how we express ourselves. «Face is language and meaning. It is obviously the location for the expressions and emotions which gives information about the character. However, the face is also the only part of the body that is normally exposed and naked. We can't hide it in our society. Finally, it belongs to social issue". Bazévian unpacks the consumerist imagery that saturates society— namely impossibly perfect magazine pictures— by composing figures whose bodies disappear and faces form in an explosion of vivid colour. For Delacapucinière, these faces are vessels of social standards, and their interpretation therefore becomes an invitation to challenge such norms. Bazévian used several techniques with oil, oil pastel and acrylic to create small, medium and large painting, developing new technique of expression by dilatation and extracting the painting. Bazévian has held solo exhibitions in France, Norway, Brazil and South Korea. Emerging artist, Bazévian’s painting can be found in all collection from US to Europe and now Asia.
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