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Untitled

Jila Kamyab - Untitled

$2,934.00

Year: 2024
Medium: Mixed Media on Canvas
Dimensions: 61 x 77 cm
Framed

Pickup available at Sahar K. Boluki Gallery

Usually ready in 24 hours

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Untitled

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Sahar K. Boluki Gallery

Pickup available, usually ready in 24 hours

160 Davenport Road
Toronto ON M5R 1J1
Canada

+16479692545

Certificate of Authenticity

All artworks in our collection come with a Certificate of Authenticity (COA) and bear the personal signature of the artist. This not only adds a unique touch but also serves as a concrete verification of the authenticity of each piece. Shop confidently, knowing you're acquiring genuine, artist-verified artworks for your collection.

Framing

Our framed artworks are beautifully finished with anti-reflective glass that offers 70% UV protection. Framing is also available upon request for artworks sold without a frame.

Jila Kamyab

Born in 1957, Jila Kamyab's creative work was largely influenced by the 1970s. The 1970s were a period of consolidation and growth in the arts, most often defined as a response to the dominant strains of the preceding decade. Conceptual art developed as a influential movement, and was in part an evolution of and response to minimalism. Land Art took the artwork into the expansive outdoors, taking creative production away from commodities and looking to engage with the earliest ideas of environmentalism. Process art combined elements of conceptualism with other formal considerations, creating mysterious and experimental bodies of work. Expressive figurative painting began to regain importance for the first time since the decline of Abstract Expressionism twenty years prior, especially in Germany where Gerhard Richter, Anselm Kiefer, Georg Baselitz became highly influential figures worldwide. New York maintained an influential position in the international art scene, ensuring that global artists continued to gravitate to the galleries, bars and downtown scene in the city. n Japan and Korea, artists associated with the Mono-Ha movement focused on encounters between natural and industrial materials such as stone, glass, cotton, sponge, wood, oil and water, arranging them in mostly unaltered, ephemeral conditions. The works focused on the interplay between these various elements and the surrounding space, and had a strong focus upon the European ideas of phenomenology.

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