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PejacPejac Mini Print H2O Water Lottery Ticket Mint Street Art Urban Moon Man Street2019
2019
About the Item
Pejac creates provocative and humorous street art. Like the installations of street artist Banksy, Pejac’s irreverent site-specific works often employ trompe-l’œil techniques and clever twists on familiar imagery to communicate powerful messages regarding social and environmental issues. In his famous piece Stain (2011), Pejac paints a map of the world draining into a sewer. Working in a range of mediums, Pejac is known for his recreations of classic masterpieces, like the installation Don’t Look Back in Anger (2016), which features a rendition of van Gogh’s Starry Night (1889) carved by key into the hood of Jaguar. Although he graduated from the Accademia di Belle Arti di Brera in Milan, Pejac is a fierce proponent of street art who believes art should be accessible to all. His works can be found in Paris, London, Milan, Moscow, Hong Kong, Istanbul, Tokyo, and across the United States.
H2O Mini-print
21 x 14,8 cm (8,27 x 5,83 inch)
Black and white digital print
Inverkote Albatrous 350 gr paper
Matte mounted on 2,5 mm gray cardboard
Materials
Very Thick Stock Inverkote Albatrous 350 gr.
Size
8 27/100 × 5 83/100 in | 21 × 14.8 cm
Rarity
Limited edition
Medium
Print
Condition
Pristine Condition
Signature
Only made available to people whom entered the lottery and won a print. , not signed.
Series
"Moon Man"
Edition Details:
Year: 2019
Class: Art Print
Status: Official
Paper: Inverkote Albatrous 350 gr
Size: 8.27 X 5.83
- Creator:Pejac (1977, Spanish)
- Creation Year:2019
- Dimensions:Height: 8.27 in (21.01 cm)Width: 5.83 in (14.81 cm)
- Medium:
- Movement & Style:
- Period:
- Condition:
- Gallery Location:Draper, UT
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU1327213146922
Pejac, is a Spanish painter and street artist. He was born in 1977 in Santander, Cantabria, Spain. He studied Fine Arts in Salamanca and then Barcelona. In 2001, Santiago’s first steps towards street art happened while at university in Italy when he became disillusioned with the attitudes of his art teachers. As a reaction to their elitist values, he decided he would create art for everybody. Around 2000, Santiago started working in the streets of Milan to bring art to those who would never visit a museum. Pejac mainly paints with black to create silhouetted figures and shadows but sometimes uses splashes of colour to show them in a smart and poetic manner in both playful and serious scenes. From miniature window drawings, large outdoor pieces to replicas of classic masterpieces, Pejac proved he is a truly skilled artist whose works always touch on sensitive social themes and topical issues like peace or global warming. He is also acknowledged for his tremendous ability to adapt his outdoor work to its environment so as to pass a striking message. His most famous work is probably a painting of the map of the world draining into a sewer, in which the artist cleverly used the urban surroundings as part of the entire image to create a challenging site-specific artwork. Pejac has proven he is capable of making incredible replicas or remakes of classic masterpieces by Eugène Delacroix, Kutsushika Hokusai; or references to Edvard Munch or Alberto Giacometto, Pejac’s probably most accomplished project is one based on French painter Claude Monet’s most famous impressionist painting. Pejac recreated Monet’s 1872 Impression, Sunrise on the rusty hull of an abandoned ship on the shores of Cantabria, Spain. Depending on the tide, a part of the painting is partially hidden underwater, letting the ocean itself revealing and hidding the painting. Pejac’s first solo exhibition, entitled Oximoron, opened from April to May 2010 at Galeria Benito Esteban in Salamanca. Six years later, Pejac opened his first major UK solo show Law of the Weekest at Londonewcastle Project Space in London. The show exhibited 35 pieces tackling environmental issues. On the occasion of the show, the artist painted a series of provocative public art installations like Don’t Look Back in Anger directly made onto a new Jaguar and a reinterpretation of Van Gogh’s Starry Night to comment on Brexit. Then in June 2018, Pejac launched the Waterline show, held on a péniche boat in Paris, where 80 copies of the work A Forest were for sale and whose collected funds were donated to the environmental NGO Foundation GoodPlanet. In 2015, Pejac also participated in Europe’s largest celebration of street art NuArt Festival organised in Stavanger, Norway, where he paid a tribute to Norwegian painter Edvard Munch with his work Drift. Pejac’s ability to work with different mediums, techniques, formats and styles to tackle various subjects makes him a skillful artist whose style has rarely been seen in the art world.
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