Leo Leonhard:
Picture "Pavement Artist", framed
Proportional view
Picture "Pavement Artist", framed
Leo Leonhard:
Picture "Pavement Artist", framed

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ars mundi Exclusive Edition | limited, 299 copies | numbered | signed | reproduction, Giclée print on handmade paper | framed | size 58 x 77 cm (h/w)

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Last exemplars
Product no. IN-734140.R2

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Picture "Pavement Artist", framed
Leo Leonhard: Picture "Pavement Artist", framed

Detailed description

Picture "Pavement Artist", framed

Leonhard pays homage to the greats of art history. The painting depicts the "pavement artist" creating Caravaggio's "The Calling of St. Matthew" from 1599. This 21st-century picture artfully quotes the famous work by Caravaggio. The viewer takes part in an art dialogue spanning 400 years, in which Leonhard enters into conversation with his fellow painter Caravaggio, ironically shattering the torpor of museum dignity.

Reproduction of a coloured drypoint as a colourful Giclée print on handmade paper. Limited edition of 299 copies, numbered and signed by hand. ars mundi Exclusive Edition. Sheet size 54 x 73 cm (h/w). Framed in a silver solid wood frame. Size 58 x 77 cm (h/w).

About Leo Leonhard

1939-2011

Leo Leonhard was born in Leipzig, Germany. He studied German language and literature in Marburg and afterwards painting and graphic arts at the Düsseldorf Art Academy. For many years he taught s as a professor of drawing and illustration in Mainz.

He became internationally famous for his numerous book illustrations, which – such as his highly acclaimed "Faust Cycle" – went far beyond providing a graphic accompaniment to the narrative plot. Leonhard drew and commented, his illustrations liking the great classics to the present. This was also the case with the works in his homage cycles, which were created in recent years (oil paintings, but also drawings and etchings).

Leonhard paid homage to the greats of art history with humour. For example, there is an artwork where Joseph Beuys observing a daliesque hare striding along on large stilts ("Beuys and the Hare") or a homage à Piero della Francesca in which his work is threatened to be covered over by a craftsman with a large roll of paint ("Rollover Piero"). And there is the "pavement painter", under whose skilful hands Caravaggio's "Vocation of St. Matthew" of 1599 was created.

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