Viktor MiticSouthern Stripes 21-03 - pop-art, graffiti, acrylic and spray paint on canvas2021
2021
About the Item
- Creator:Viktor Mitic (Canadian)
- Creation Year:2021
- Dimensions:Height: 40 in (101.6 cm)Width: 30 in (76.2 cm)
- Medium:
- Movement & Style:
- Period:
- Condition:
- Gallery Location:Bloomfield, CA
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU29113807722
Viktor Mitic
Painter Viktor Mitic is best known for his use of firearms as an artistic tool. Depictions of celebrities and historical figures riddled with bullet holes provocatively reflect on the senselessness of gun violence.
Mitic was born in Belgrade, then part of Yugoslavia and now the capital of Serbia. While in compulsory military service, Mitic came to see the gun as a potential medium for his art. He later moved to Canada, where he graduated with his BFA in 1995 from the University of Toronto. That year, he completed a portrait of Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chrétien, which he presented in a formal unveiling at the prime minister’s office in Ottawa.
Mitic’s fame grew in 2008 after he displayed his most controversial piece, Hole Jesus, at Trias Gallery in Toronto. It drew widespread media attention. Over the following years, he made more works featuring images of well-known people, shot up with a .22 caliber pistol.
Mitic has participated in exhibitions around the world, including a 2008 show at the Muramatsu Gallery in Tokyo. In 2010, he presented his acclaimed Art or War collection at Gallery Moos in Toronto.
Although he has produced art in other media — including sculptures — his bullet hole paintings remain in demand with collectors. Mitic continues to create art that intrigues and confounds critics and viewers.
On 1stDibs, explore a selection of Viktor Mitic’s abstract and figurative paintings, mixed media art and more.
- ShippingRetrieving quote...Ships From: Bloomfield, Canada
- Return PolicyA return for this item may be initiated within 7 days of delivery.
- Southern Stripes 21-01 - pop-art, graffiti, acrylic and spray paint on canvasBy Viktor MiticLocated in Bloomfield, ONWaves of bright colours in a bold graphic design create a joyful composition in this new pop art painting by Viktor Mitic. The vivid palette-- pink, purple, turquoise, green, white a...Category
2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings
MaterialsCanvas, Spray Paint, Acrylic
- Southern Stripes 24-02 - pop-art, graffiti, acrylic and spray paint on canvasBy Viktor MiticLocated in Bloomfield, ONColour and dynamic graphic design find company in this new abstract painting by Viktor Mitic. The Southern Stripe series explores the power of colour to convey positive emotion. Each...Category
2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings
MaterialsCanvas, Spray Paint, Acrylic
- Paper House - lively, abstracted, collage, acrylic and spray paint on canvasBy Fiona AckermanLocated in Bloomfield, ONThrough integrated and vigorous passages of acrylic that are brushed, sprayed, stenciled and shaped, Ackerman deconstructs the idea of a house interior. This lively and colorful coll...Category
2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings
MaterialsCanvas, Spray Paint, Acrylic
- Shaded Archway with Earth and Red - bold, colorful, abstract, acrylic on canvasBy Aron HillLocated in Bloomfield, ONCalgary’s Aron Hill creates unique, pop art Inspired by the dynamic form and colour of abstract artists like Jack Bush. This piece in acrylic and ink on canvas combines architectural...Category
2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings
MaterialsCanvas, Ink, Acrylic
- Living Things - large, bright, colourful, yellow, abstraction, acrylic on canvasBy Milly RistvedtLocated in Bloomfield, ONDrops of violet balance the movement of luminous yellow orbs in this elegant chartreuse composition by Milly Ristvedt. "Color is the magical sensation and substance, the 'philosopher's stone,' that for me represents hope in a time of great challenge for us all." Milly Ristvedt Milly Ristvedt (b. 1942, Kimberley, BC) MA, RCA, began her career in Toronto in 1964 after studies with Takao Tanabe...Category
2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings
MaterialsCanvas, Acrylic
- The Sum of All Parts No 22 - vivid, blue, white, abstract, acrylic on canvasBy Shireen KamranLocated in Bloomfield, ONIn this dramatic and lyrical abstract composition by Montreal-based artist Shireen Kamran rich, dark colours—Prussian blue, ochre and dove grey contrast with muted whites and a touch...Category
2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings
MaterialsCanvas, Acrylic
- "Where do I go from here" Large oil and acrylic on canvas with metal grid 66x80"By CeravoloLocated in Southampton, NYThis large original painting by Ceravolo measures 66x80". it is painted with oil and acrylic on canvas with spray painted lettering and a rusted metal grid installed approx 1 inch i...Category
2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings
MaterialsMetal
- La Autentica Brisa de la Colina/ The TruthBy Starsky BrinesLocated in New Orleans, LASTARSKY BRINE’s paintings and drawings captivate audiences with their distinctive style and a recurring theme, the search for the nature of humanity. In his bold works, the artist fo...Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Abstract Paintings
MaterialsCanvas, Crayon, Spray Paint, Acrylic
- Mixed Media Oil Painting and Spray Paint Abstract Painting SelbstportraitBy Kadar BrockLocated in Surfside, FL"Selbstportrait Und Der Sonne" This work is part of a series of alligator paintings Brock made in 2007. All are painted in a somewhat similar and brash style, and are based on an incredibly vivid dream of an albino alligator with sunglasses. There were about ten in the series. Most were traded away to other artists, though one larger one was purchased from a gallery exhibition with the now defunct Buia Gallery in 2008. Kadar Brock (born May 28, 1980) is a casualist artist. He graduated in 2002 with a BFA from Cooper Union School of Art in New York City. He lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. Brock’s work has been reviewed in The New York Times, The Village Voice, Artforum, Bomb Magazine, The Brooklyn Rail, Interview Magazine, White Hot Magazine and Dazed and Confused, W Magazine, Bloomberg News, and Cultured Magazine. Brock first creates relatively conventional large abstract paintings, which one commentator describes as "happy". These are then "negated and disenchanted" by a long process including adding layers, scraping, puncturing, and slicing. The results of this process are what Brock exhibits. He also incorporates fragments of such canvasses into the surfaces of other works. W Magazine wrote that Brock was "... best known for his unorthodox approach to abstract painting, in which he creates frenetic, gestural images and then renders them unrecognizable with the help of a razor blade and a power sander." Marina Cashdan wrote: "His studio is an ecosystem—and an efficient one—in which the artist’s methodical and ritualistic process makes for a consistent upcycling of materials across the space: when he spray-paints, he uses a canvas as the drop cloth; that canvas becomes the start of a painting; and that painting has two fates: one sliding door is going under the razor and the industrial sander, before being coated with layers of pigments and primed, sanded, and primed, a process repeated until the desired effect is reached; the other fate is to be martyred into chips or dust." Stephan Cox, in Hunted Projects: In Dialogue wrote: "What’s fascinating is that Brock’s works are the product of an artist who aims to demystify the gesture in painting through creating rituals that in effect eradicate the didactic artist-viewer scenario. Brock doesn’t aim to create works that are easily read as being a by-product of an artist’s expression; Brock has created a set of rituals, a rolling of dice, where he, in effect has his actions directed for him. This could be through the number of brush strokes to apply or the number of cuts to make, in all, his intuitive approach to painting is not present or discernible to the viewer." In Kadar Brock’s large-scale abstract paintings, a discordant combination of techniques, styles, and colors comes together in clashing tension. By turns described as a post-graffiti and “casualist” artist, Brock riffs on the history of abstraction, employing old tropes and marshalling simple patterns and crude geometric forms into his works, while also inviting an element of chance to determine his markings. He has explored the loose, gestural, and expressive idea of abstraction in the works of German painters like Albert Oehlen and Gerhard Richter, and He has been known to roll a Dungeons & Dragons dice to dictate marks in his paintings according to the die’s symbols and numbers. In repetitive compositions, Brock allows accidents in their production (such as heavy downward paint drips) to differentiate. In 2013, Brock had his breakout solo show in New York, at The Hole, entitled “dredge.” The entire main gallery space was filled with new paintings. The show very quickly sold out. He has exhibited at galleries internationally, with solo shows at Vigo Gallery...Category
Early 2000s Contemporary Abstract Paintings
MaterialsCanvas, Oil, Spray Paint, Acrylic
- "DUAL Pop Icon No. 1", Monumental Contemporary Spray Painted PortraitBy Paul BarcesLocated in Houston, TXBold, graphic spray paint portrait piece by local Houston street artist DUAL titled "Pop Icon No. 1 ". Signed, titled, and dated on the back. This piece was featured at a solo exhibition of DUAL's work titled "Waste Nothing" at the Wedge Space in Houston, TX in 2016. Artist Biography: DUAL stands for the conflict between “street art” and “fine” art, between freeway burners and gallery exhibitions, between mass recognition and total anonymity. His bold lines and fresh colors are a break from the every day monotony of life in the city—a taste of urban subculture, whether you asked for it or not. While one may not have a choice in where and when they encounter a DUAL piece, DUAL leaves it up to the observer to assign a meaning to his work. By operating under a pseudonym, he lets his audience write their own narrative for who he is and the message he is trying to get across. Perhaps best known for his work with wheat paste, particularly since his feature in the 2011 wheat pasting documentary Stick ‘Em Up!, DUAL has never been one to confine himself to a particular medium, background, or context. He has been recognized not only for his work with silkscreen and spray paint, but also for his work with lithography and acrylics. Though his obsession with “making marks” stems from his background in graffiti, he has translated that into a passion for creating art. His “art” includes everything from large-scale murals to micro...Category
2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings
MaterialsCanvas, Spray Paint, Acrylic
- Maggie LaPorte Banks, Groups of Ten, Abstract Art, Affordable Art, Art OnlineBy Maggie LaPorte BanksLocated in Deddington, GBMaggie LaPorte Banks Groups of Ten Acrylic, collage, Text, and Graffiti Spray Paint on Canvas Board Size: H 30cm x W 40cm x D 0.05cm Sold Unframed (Please note that in situ images ar...Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Abstract Paintings
MaterialsCanvas, Mixed Media, Spray Paint, Acrylic
- Maggie Laporte Banks, Close by the Wychbeam Tree, Abstract Art, Contemporary ArtBy Maggie LaPorte BanksLocated in Deddington, GBMaggie Laporte Banks. Close by the Wychbeam Tree. Acrylic, spray paint, collage, raw pigment on canvas. Sold Unframed. H. 60 cm x W. 60 cm x D 2 cm . Insitu images are purely an indi...Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Abstract Paintings
MaterialsCanvas, Mixed Media, Spray Paint, Acrylic, Pigment