Geneva - Paintings
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Item Ships From: Geneva
Oil on canvas attributed to Francis Smith
Located in grand Lancy, CH
Born in Lisbon in 1881, Francis Smith was a French-Portuguese painter of English parentage, who lived in Paris from 1907. He took part in several exhibitions in Portugal, the free ex...
Category
1930s Portuguese Vintage Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Canvas
$6,960 Sale Price
20% Off
Oil on panel a horse
Located in grand Lancy, CH
Oil on panel a horse in front of a stable or a farm
Category
Early 20th Century English Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Wood
$1,700
Wall decorative painting on paper
Located in grand Lancy, CH
Wall decorative painting on paper
Category
1980s European Vintage Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Paper
$480 Sale Price
20% Off
Wall decorative painting on paper
Located in grand Lancy, CH
Wall decorative painting on paper
Category
1980s European Vintage Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Paper
$480 Sale Price
20% Off
Wood Cusco school painting
Located in grand Lancy, CH
Wall Cusco school painting
Category
Late 18th Century Antique Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Wood
Wall decorative painting on paper
Located in grand Lancy, CH
Wall decorative painting on paper
Category
1980s European Vintage Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Paper
$480 Sale Price
20% Off
Decorative painting of French alp by Decarli
Located in grand Lancy, CH
Decorative painting by Decarli of French alp
Category
1940s French Vintage Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Wood, Paper
$720 Sale Price
20% Off
oil on canvas representing a herd of goats and a shepherd in the Alps
Located in grand Lancy, CH
oil on canvas representing a herd of goats and a shepherd in the Alps there is a small hole in the canvas see the photo signed lower left
Category
1920s French Vintage Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Canvas
$1,336 Sale Price
20% Off
Decorative oil on canvas
Located in grand Lancy, CH
Decorative oil on canvas signed and dated 78
Category
1970s Greek Vintage Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Wood
$1,660
Decorative painting of Swiss alp
Located in grand Lancy, CH
Decorative painting of Swiss alp
Category
1920s Swiss Vintage Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Canvas
$1,040 Sale Price
20% Off
Oil on canvas Swiss alp cow
Located in grand Lancy, CH
Swiss alp painting cow in alp land
Category
1940s Swiss Vintage Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Wood
$1,848 Sale Price
20% Off
Wall painting title St Francois de Sales by Cortey de Bagnes
Located in grand Lancy, CH
painting by Cortey de Bagnes representing as written directly on the painting "st francois de sales after the original portrait" Felix Cortey born and died in Chable and one of the g...
Category
Late 18th Century Swiss Antique Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Fabric, Wood
$2,560 Sale Price
20% Off
Wall painting by Felix Cortey " portrait de la vierge Marie "
Located in grand Lancy, CH
painting by Cortey de Bagnes signed back "peint par Cortey de Bagnes " representing as written directly on the painting "portrait of the Virgin Mary" Felix Cortey born and died in Ch...
Category
Late 18th Century Swiss Antique Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Fabric, Wood
$2,560 Sale Price
20% Off
painting of a Swiss peasant woman
Located in grand Lancy, CH
painting of a Swiss peasant woman
Category
Early 19th Century Swiss Antique Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Fabric, Wood
$1,440 Sale Price
20% Off
Figure in Red Contemplating an Orange Sunset on a Night Scene with Many People
Located in Miami, FL
Jean Sanglar was born in France in 1926. He draws with taste and talent from an early age, however, his family will only consider this a mere hobby. After studying law, he later took...
Category
Late 20th Century French Modern Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Acrylic, Wood, Paint
Have You Seen My Shirt Two Figured Represented in an Erotic Situation
Located in Miami, FL
Jean Sanglar was born in France in 1926. He draws with taste and talent from an early age, however, his family will only consider this a mere hobby. After studying law, he later took...
Category
Late 20th Century French Modern Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Acrylic, Wood, Paint
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Previously Available Items
Swiss Alp Painted
Located in grand Lancy, CH
Swiss alp painted.
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Yury Kharchenko - Untitled - Painting
By Yury Kharchenko
Located in Geneve, CH
Untitled, 300 x 190 cm, oil on canvas, 2010.
Yury Kharchenko is a Russian German artist. He lives and works in Berlin.
From 2004-2008 he studied at the famous Kunstakademie Düsseldorf by Markus Lüpertz and Siegfried Anzinger and graduated with master of fine arts and Diploma. From 2011-2012 he was in a PhD programme at the University of Potsdam and did a research about the art philosophy in postmodern times influenced by Jacques Derrida and Emmanuel Levinas.
His works are part of important museum collections like Museum Kunstpalast Düsseldorf, State Collection Düsseldorf, Kunst aus NRW Aachen and Felix Nussbaum Haus Osnabrück.
Yury Kharchenko’s works can make one forget that such a thing as pop art and post modernism ever existed. His pictures are completely free of cynicism, and there is nothing second-hand about them. His painting is not that of an epigone. They focus on the formal and emotional possibilities of painting. They are both non-representational, pure visual phenomena like sounds and representational, simple shapes such as the houses, which form the backbone of the cycle, or as the silhouettes of figures hidden in the thickets and scrub of the dark lattice structure of these pictorial spaces. Yury Kharchenko’s paintings are delightful in their texture and their sense of color, stimulating the senses and arousing strong feelings in the viewer.
In order to endure the turbulence on this journey within the picture and to domesticate the overwhelming flood of free forms and fleeing forces, Kharchenko has provided his recent works with a frame. For this purpose he selects the archetype of a house in order to, as he says, "hold the painting together" with this shape. As Kharchenko says, "paintings must also take on shape. Thus, this superordinate structure is like a metaphorical roof which delimits and holds together the representation of painting and is not a painted representation of a house! This taming of an undirected drive by way of an organizing form reflects the duality of human nature, which Friedrich Nietzsche described with the principles of the Apollonian and Dionysian. Accordingly the Apollonian strives for form and shape, while the Dionysian follows the intoxication and the creative drive that breaks all form. By using the house, although a symbol of protection and security, Kharchenko does not attempt to abolish this conflict, which is inherent in any creative work, but rather, to endure it and, above all, to visualize it through painting.
Nevertheless, a problem arises of spectator subjectivity. Namely, intuiting momentarily the physical properties and emotional directives of a work differs categorically from shaping and impressing them with one’s own hands: the role of seer is necessarily passive in relation to that of maker. However, the starting point of an individual confronting the concrete work coheres with Marx’s preferred hermeneutic. In direct contrast to German philosophy which descends from heaven to earth, here we ascend from earth to heaven. That is to say, we do not set out from what men say, imagine, conceive, nor from men as narrated, thought of, imagined, conceived, in order to arrive at men in the flesh. The individual who addresses the artwork effects his own activity, turning himself into a person who thinks deeper about the design before him or walks away. We set out from real, active men, and on the basis of their real life-process we demonstrate the development of the ideological reflexes and echoes of this life-process.
2015.
Bonnefanten, Roermond, NL.
Mirta Demare Gallery, Rotterdam.
Jagla Ausstellungsraum, Cologne.
Ober Gallery, Kent, CT, USA.
2014.
Clara Maria Sels Gallery, Düsseldorf.
Ilya Kabakov, Yury Kharchenko, Panamarenko, Alexander Braun.
Bespoke, Düsseldorf.
With Barbara Friedman, Nicola Stäglich.
Kunstverein Dillingen with Thomas Huber.
Ober Gallery, Kent, CT, USA with Jasper Johns, AR Penck...
Category
2010s German Modern Geneva - Paintings
Yury Kharchenko House of Red Heart
By Yury Kharchenko
Located in Geneve, CH
House of blue, 160 x 130 cm, oil on canvas, 2013.
Yury Kharchenko is a Russian German artist. He lives and works in Berlin.
From 2004-2008 he studied at the famous Kunstakademie Düsseldorf by Markus Lüpertz and Siegfried Anzinger and graduated with master of fine arts and Diploma. From 2011-2012 he was in a PhD programme at the University of Potsdam and did a research about the art philosophy in postmodern times influenced by Jacques Derrida and Emmanuel Levinas.
His works are part of important museum collections like Museum Kunstpalast Düsseldorf, State Collection Düsseldorf, Kunst aus NRW Aachen and Felix Nussbaum Haus Osnabrück.
Yury Kharchenko’s works can make one forget that such a thing as pop art and post modernism ever existed. His pictures are completely free of cynicism, and there is nothing second-hand about them. His painting is not that of an epigone. They focus on the formal and emotional possibilities of painting. They are both non-representational, pure visual phenomena like sounds and representational, simple shapes such as the houses, which form the backbone of the cycle, or as the silhouettes of figures hidden in the thickets and scrub of the dark lattice structure of these pictorial spaces. Yury Kharchenko’s paintings are delightful in their texture and their sense of color, stimulating the senses and arousing strong feelings in the viewer.
In order to endure the turbulence on this journey within the picture and to domesticate the overwhelming flood of free forms and fleeing forces, Kharchenko has provided his recent works with a frame. For this purpose he selects the archetype of a house in order to, as he says, "hold the painting together" with this shape. As Kharchenko says, "paintings must also take on shape. Thus, this superordinate structure is like a metaphorical roof which delimits and holds together the representation of painting and is not a painted representation of a house! This taming of an undirected drive by way of an organizing form reflects the duality of human nature, which Friedrich Nietzsche described with the principles of the Apollonian and Dionysian. Accordingly the Apollonian strives for form and shape, while the Dionysian follows the intoxication and the creative drive that breaks all form. By using the house, although a symbol of protection and security, Kharchenko does not attempt to abolish this conflict, which is inherent in any creative work, but rather, to endure it and, above all, to visualize it through painting.
Nevertheless, a problem arises of spectator subjectivity. Namely, intuiting momentarily the physical properties and emotional directives of a work differs categorically from shaping and impressing them with one’s own hands: the role of seer is necessarily passive in relation to that of maker. However, the starting point of an individual confronting the concrete work coheres with Marx’s preferred hermeneutic. In direct contrast to German philosophy which descends from heaven to earth, here we ascend from earth to heaven. That is to say, we do not set out from what men say, imagine, conceive, nor from men as narrated, thought of, imagined, conceived, in order to arrive at men in the flesh. The individual who addresses the artwork effects his own activity, turning himself into a person who thinks deeper about the design before him or walks away. We set out from real, active men, and on the basis of their real life-process we demonstrate the development of the ideological reflexes and echoes of this life-process.
2015.
Bonnefanten, Roermond, NL.
Mirta Demare Gallery, Rotterdam.
Jagla Ausstellungsraum, Cologne.
Ober Gallery, Kent, CT, USA.
2014.
Clara Maria Sels Gallery, Düsseldorf.
Ilya Kabakov, Yury Kharchenko, Panamarenko, Alexander Braun.
Bespoke, Düsseldorf.
With Barbara Friedman, Nicola Stäglich.
Kunstverein Dillingen with Thomas Huber.
Ober Gallery, Kent, CT, USA with Jasper Johns, AR Penck...
Category
2010s German Modern Geneva - Paintings
Becker Schmitz - One Moment in My Life
By Becker Schmitz
Located in Geneve, CH
It is no easy task to describe the extremely heterogeneous work of Becker Schmitz in a few brief sentences. First of all, it is not possible to say clearly whether the work of the German-based artist is to be classified as “painting”, “installation” or “site-specific intervention”.
He takes great pleasure in hopping from one genre to the next and refuses all one-dimensional, constricting categorizations.
Nevertheless, the various components of his protean oeuvre are all charged with the same energy, with the same striking readiness to expand with force into three-dimensional space.
When he paints, Becker Schmitz creates hallucinatory pictures full of spectral beauty, pictures with venomously garish colours in front of bleak and gloomy backgrounds, pictures with weighty materiality and an almost sculptural texture, pictures whose archetypical motifs (house, tree, horse) oscillate in a precarious balance between a pure experience of painting and narratives full of atmosphere. It is at all times uncertain whether the motifs emerge out of the painting surface or, on the contrary, whether they are themselves bearers of surface effects.
When he works with sculptural means, Becker Schmitz treats the respective space in a way that is highly particular. With the simplest of materials – found wooden batons, adhesive tape – he builds dynamic structures, which he wedges between the walls and ceilings, or he fills the exhibition space with inflatable, cumbersome modules, which force the viewer to rethink classical spatial perception.
His minimal or obsessive interventions make use of an invasive strategy, which underscores the characteristics of the space and – because they are so obtrusive – simultaneously causes these to disappear altogether.
*1980 born in Moers, Germany.
Study of painting and interdisciplinary art with
Wolfgang Hambrecht
Bernd Mechler
Stephan Paul Schneider
free Academy for applied arts, Essen
(freie Akademie der bildenden Künste, Essen)
2015 free Academy for applied arts / Univerity for applied arts, Essen
Lecturer for interdisciplinary art
AWARDS
2012
nominated for the “Space Art Award”
-
“artbahn Förderpreis” Rheinbahn Düsseldorf
2010-2013
Studio grant from the Ludwig-Galerie Schloss Oberhausen and the City of Oberhausen
2010
Masterstudent of Wolfgang Hambrecht and Stephan-Paul Schneider
2007-2010
Studio grant from the City of Oberhausen
2008-2010
Scholarship from the Freien Akademie der bildenden Künste, Essen (fadbk)
SOLO EXHIBITIONS
2015
Galerie Philia
Galerie Ikosaeder, Essen (upcoming)
2014
LAVATION
Galerie Börgmann
-
Philipps-Universität Marburg
-
„Blow Up“ at Traumzeitfestival
Landschaftspark Duisburg Nord
2013
„Electric_ID is Killing the Darkness“
Galerie Schabadke, Duisburg
-
„GÖTTERDÄMMERUNG“
fadbkHBK,Essen
-
„AGGREGAT/CONGREGAT“
The Golden Tube
Philipps-Universität Marburg2012
„Blattschuss“ Galerie Börgmann, Krefeld Katalog
-
„QUIET RIOT“ feat. Lea Carla Diestelhorst and Pascal Bruns, Duisburger Kunstverein
-
„RABBIT HOLE“, Junges Museum, Bottrop
-
HIDDEN CURRICULUM, feat. Lea-Carla Diestelhorst
-
Galerie Künstlerhaus Bergedorf, Hamburg
2011
„PERMAFROST“
Im Freien Kunst Territorium, Bochum
2010
„800 METER INTENSIV“,
Site-specific installation, Kreuzkirche in Duisburg-Marxloh, Duisburg
-
„ROROROBOTER“ Kontorhaus Duisburg Innenhafen, Duisburg
GROUP EXHIBITIONS
2015
„Green City“ (upcoming)
Ludwiggalerie Schloss Oberhausen
-
„abstract strategies“
Galerie Schütte in den Scheid´schen Hallen, Essen
-
„Die Grosse Kunstausstellung NRW“
Museum Kunstpalast
2014
„Alles Auf Anfang“
Kunsthaus Oberhausen
-
„Splash Mag Stage“ at Berlin Art Festival
-
„Ars Dilletanti“
Temporäre Kunstsammlung, Augsburg
-
„abstract strategies“
Galerie Beskope, Düsseldorf
-
„Black RestWhite Noise“
Galerie Module, Dresden
-
conturbanaries Art Fair, Berlin
Galerie Schaufenster by Jan Kage
-
„Die Grosse Kunstausstellung NRW“
Museum Kunstpalast, Düsseldorf
-
stromaufwärts-Junge Positionen,
Ludwiggalerie, Schloss Oberhausen2013
Contemporary Art Ruhr – Art Fair
Zeche Zollverein, Essen
-
Kunstsammlung Ulbricht Kreer-Ulbricht,
Städische Galerie, Bottrop
-
„Ars Dilettanti“, Augsburg
Temporäre Kunstsammlung, Augsburg
-
„False Optimism“
Crawford Art Gallery, Cork, Ireland
2012
INTERVALL 01, Galerie Börgmann, Krefeld
-
“Space Art Award” New Yorker Hotel...
Category
2010s German Modern Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Canvas
Yury Kharchenko, "Snowy House" Painting
By Yury Kharchenko
Located in Geneve, CH
Snowy house, 140 x 120cm, oil on canvas, 2013
Yury Kharchenko is a Russian German artist. He lives and works in Berlin.
From 2004-2008 he studied at the famous Kunstakademie Düsseldorf by Markus Lüpertz and Siegfried Anzinger and graduated with master of fine arts and Diploma. From 2011-2012 he was in a PhD programme at the University of Potsdam and did a research about the art philosophy in postmodern times influenced by Jacques Derrida and Emmanuel Levinas.
His works are part of important museum collections like Museum Kunstpalast Düsseldorf, State Collection Düsseldorf, Kunst aus NRW Aachen and Felix Nussbaum Haus Osnabrück.
Yury Kharchenko’s works can make one forget that such a thing as pop art and post modernism ever existed. His pictures are completely free of cynicism and there is nothing second-hand about them. His painting is not that of an epigone. They focus on the formal and emotional possibilities of painting. They are both non-representational, pure visual phenomena like sounds and representational, simple shapes such as the houses, which form the backbone of the cycle, or as the silhouettes of figures hidden in the thickets and scrub of the dark lattice structure of these pictorial spaces. Yury Kharchenko’s paintings are delightful in their texture and their sense of color, stimulating the senses and arousing strong feelings in the viewer.
In order to endure the turbulence on this journey within the picture and to domesticate the overwhelming flood of free forms and fleeing forces, Kharchenko has provided his recent works with a frame. For this purpose he selects the archetype of a house in order to, as he says, "hold the painting together" with this shape. As Kharchenko says, "paintings must also take on shape. Thus, this superordinate structure is like a metaphorical roof which delimits and holds together the representation of painting and is not a painted representation of a house! This taming of an undirected drive by way of an organizing form reflects the duality of human nature, which Friedrich Nietzsche described with the principles of the Apollonian and Dionysian. Accordingly the Apollonian strives for form and shape, while the Dionysian follows the intoxication and the creative drive that breaks all form. By using the house, although a symbol of protection and security, Kharchenko does not attempt to abolish this conflict, which is inherent in any creative work, but rather, to endure it and, above all, to visualize it through painting.
Nevertheless, a problem arises of spectator subjectivity. Namely, intuiting momentarily the physical properties and emotional directives of a work differs categorically from shaping and impressing them with one’s own hands: the role of seer is necessarily passive in relation to that of maker. However, the starting point of an individual confronting the concrete work coheres with Marx’s preferred hermeneutic. In direct contrast to German philosophy which descends from heaven to earth, here we ascend from earth to heaven. That is to say, we do not set out from what men say, imagine, conceive, nor from men as narrated, thought of, imagined, conceived, in order to arrive at men in the flesh. The individual who addresses the artwork effects his own activity, turning himself into a person who thinks deeper about the design before him or walks away. We set out from real, active men, and on the basis of their real life-process we demonstrate the development of the ideological reflexes and echoes of this life-process.
2015.
Bonnefanten, Roermond, NL.
Mirta Demare Gallery, Rotterdam.
Jagla Ausstellungsraum, Cologne.
Ober Gallery, Kent, CT, USA.
2014.
Clara Maria Sels Gallery, Düsseldorf.
Ilya Kabakov, Yury Kharchenko, Panamarenko, Alexander Braun.
Bespoke, Düsseldorf.
With Barbara Friedman, Nicola Staglich.
Kunstverein Dillingen with Thomas Huber.
Ober Gallery, Kent, CT, USA with Jasper Johns, AR Penck...
Category
2010s German Modern Geneva - Paintings
Yury Kharchenko House of Blue Painting
By Yury Kharchenko
Located in Geneve, CH
House of blue, 100 x 80 cm, oil on canvas, 2013.
Yury Kharchenko is a Russian German artist. He lives and works in Berlin.
From 2004-2008 he studied at the famous Kunstakademie Du¨sseldorf by Markus Lu¨pertz and Siegfried Anzinger and graduated with master of Fine arts and Diploma. From 2011-2012 he was in a PhD programme at the University of Potsdam and did a research about the art philosophy in postmodern times influenced by Jacques Derrida and Emmanuel Levinas.
His works are part of important museum collections like Museum Kunstpalast Du¨sseldorf, State Collection Du¨sseldorf, Kunst aus NRW Aachen and Felix Nussbaum Haus Osnabru¨ck.
Yury Kharchenko’s works can make one forget that such a thing as pop art and post modernism ever existed. His pictures are completely free of cynicism, and there is nothing second-hand about them. His painting is not that of an epigone. They focus on the formal and emotional possibilities of painting. They are both non-representational, pure visual phenomena like sounds and representational, simple shapes such as the houses, which form the backbone of the cycle, or as the silhouettes of figures hidden in the thickets and scrub of the dark lattice structure of these pictorial spaces. Yury Kharchenko’s paintings are delightful in their texture and their sense of color, stimulating the senses and arousing strong feelings in the viewer.
In order to endure the turbulence on this journey within the picture and to domesticate the overwhelming flood of free forms and fleeing forces, Kharchenko has provided his recent works with a frame. For this purpose he selects the archetype of a house in order to, as he says, "hold the painting together" with this shape. As Kharchenko says, "paintings must also take on shape. Thus, this superordinate structure is like a metaphorical roof which delimits and holds together the representation of painting and is not a painted representation of a house! This taming of an undirected drive by way of an organizing form reflects the duality of human nature, which Friedrich Nietzsche described with the principles of the Apollonian and Dionysian. Accordingly the Apollonian strives for form and shape, while the Dionysian follows the intoxication and the creative drive that breaks all form. By using the house, although a symbol of protection and security, Kharchenko does not attempt to abolish this conflict, which is inherent in any creative work, but rather, to endure it and, above all, to visualize it through painting.
Nevertheless, a problem arises of spectator subjectivity. Namely, intuiting momentarily the physical properties and emotional directives of a work differs categorically from shaping and impressing them with one’s own hands: the role of seer is necessarily passive in relation to that of maker. However, the starting point of an individual confronting the concrete work coheres with Marx’s preferred hermeneutic. In direct contrast to German philosophy which descends from heaven to earth, here we ascend from earth to heaven. That is to say, we do not set out from what men say, imagine, conceive, nor from men as narrated, thought of, imagined, conceived, in order to arrive at men in the flesh. The individual who addresses the artwork effects his own activity, turning himself into a person who thinks deeper about the design before him or walks away. We set out from real, active men, and on the basis of their real life-process we demonstrate the development of the ideological reflexes and echoes of this life-process.
2015.
Bonnefanten, Roermond, NL.
Mirta Demare Gallery, Rotterdam.
Jagla Ausstellungsraum, Cologne.
Ober Gallery, Kent, CT, USA.
2014.
Clara Maria Sels Gallery, Du¨sseldorf.
Ilya Kabakov, Yury Kharchenko, Panamarenko, Alexander Braun.
Bespoke, Du¨sseldorf.
With Barbara Friedman, Nicola Sta¨glich.
Kunstverein Dillingen with Thomas Huber.
Ober Gallery, Kent, CT, USA with Jasper Johns, AR Penck...
Category
2010s German Modern Geneva - Paintings
Bela Kadar Art Deco Watercolor
By Bela Kadar
Located in grand Lancy, CH
Bela Kadar art deco watercolor. Signed, title "Deux Nus au Mirroir." Bought in 1967 at Motte Galerie, Geneva.
Category
Early 20th Century Hungarian Geneva - Paintings
Materials
Paper, Watercolor
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