Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 11

Hassan Hajjaj
Abdel Legs

2014

Price Upon Request
Price Upon Request
Price Upon Request
Price Upon Request
Price Upon Request
Price Upon Request
Price Upon Request
Price Upon Request
Price Upon Request
Price Upon Request
Shipping
Retrieving quote...
The 1stDibs Promise:
Authenticity Guarantee,
Money-Back Guarantee,
24-Hour Cancellation

About the Item

Hassan Hajjaj Abdel Legs, 2014/1435 Metallic lambda print on 3mm dibond with acrylic painted tire frame Framed Dimensions: 36 3/4 x 27 inches (93.3 x 68.6 cm) Image Dimensions: 29.53 x 19.69 inches (75 x 50 cm) Edition 1/5, 2
  • Creator:
    Hassan Hajjaj (1961, Moroccan)
  • Creation Year:
    2014
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 53.5 in (135.89 cm)Width: 36.8 in (93.48 cm)
  • More Editions & Sizes:
    Edition of 5Price: $14,500
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
  • Gallery Location:
    Saint Louis, MO
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU1538214146492

More From This Seller

View All
Mali Kid Legs
By Hassan Hajjaj
Located in Saint Louis, MO
Hassan Hajjaj Mali Kid Legs, 2014 Metallic Lambda print on 3mm dibond 40 3/10 x 31 inches (102.4 x 78.7 cm) Edition 2/5
Category

2010s Street Art Color Photography

Materials

Lambda

Simo Blue Legs
By Hassan Hajjaj
Located in Saint Louis, MO
Hassan Hajjaj Simo Legs in Blue, 2013 Metallic Lambda print on 3mm dibond 36 3/4 x 27 inches (93.3 x 68.6 cm) Edition 2/5
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Portrait Photography

Materials

Metal

Kick Start
By Hassan Hajjaj
Located in Saint Louis, MO
With his multimedia portraits, Moroccan artist Hassan Hajjaj thrives in a space between cultures, traditions, mediums, and artistic movements. The subjects of his photography range f...
Category

Early 2000s Portrait Photography

Materials

Wood, Lambda

Toca Feliciano
By Hassan Hajjaj
Located in Saint Louis, MO
With his multimedia portraits, Moroccan artist Hassan Hajjaj thrives in a space between cultures, traditions, mediums, and artistic movements. The subjects of his photography range f...
Category

2010s Portrait Photography

Materials

Lambda

Bumi
By Hassan Hajjaj
Located in Saint Louis, MO
With his multimedia portraits, Moroccan artist Hassan Hajjaj thrives in a space between cultures, traditions, mediums, and artistic movements. The subjects of his photography range f...
Category

2010s Portrait Photography

Materials

Wood, Lambda

Odd 1 Out
By Hassan Hajjaj
Located in Saint Louis, MO
With his multimedia portraits, Moroccan artist Hassan Hajjaj thrives in a space between cultures, traditions, mediums, and artistic movements. The subjects of his photography range f...
Category

Early 2000s Portrait Photography

Materials

Wood, C Print

You May Also Like

"Man of The Ouanergui Carrying the Tabbane" from "Costumes of Morocco"
Located in Detroit, MI
"Homme de L'Ouanergui Portant le Tabban" translated to "Man of The Ouanergui Carrying the Tabbane" is plate number 25 in Jean Besancenot's stunning por...
Category

1940s Portrait Prints

Materials

Paper, Gouache

Africa, Morocco, Lace Curtains, Contemporary Photography
By Jean-Michel Voge
Located in New york, NY
Lace curtains, Morocco, 1980 by Jean-Michel (JM) Voge, is a contemporary color photograph, an archival pigment print on handmade Awagami Japanese paper. ...
Category

1980s Contemporary Portrait Photography

Materials

Photographic Film, Archival Ink, Archival Paper, Rag Paper, Digital, Arc...

African American Large Vintage Color Photograph Dandy C Print Photo Ike Ude
By Iké Udé
Located in Surfside, FL
BEYOND DECORUM, CLOSED AND OPEN Series, I am selling each individually. they are pairs of open and closed jackets. I will include the second photo for reference. This listing is just for the open jacket photograph. Vintage C-print on Fuji crystal archive paper. Image size is 40 x 30", sheet measures 50 X 35 Provenance: printed by Muse X, Los Angeles. I believe these were test, proof prints. They are not signed or editioned The work of Nigerian-born Iké Udé explores a world of dualities: photographer/performance artist, artist/spectator, African/post-nationalist, mainstream/marginal, individual/everyman and fashion/art. Iké Udé (born 1964) is a Nigerian-American photographer, performance artist, Ike Ude was born in 1964 in Lagos, Nigeria where he was raised. The eldest son of a wealthy family, he was exposed to photography and portraiture at an early age by dressing up for biweekly family portraits. Udé knew he was an artist by the age of six, when he developed a habit of firing a catapult at passers-by when he disapproved of their walk or the way they were dressed. As an adolescent, Udé attended the Government Secondary School, a British boarding school in Afikpo Nigeria. He was a habitué of London before he moved to New York in 1981 to study Media Communications at Hunter College, CUNY. He began his art career in the late 1980s with abstract painting and drawing. Since the 1990s, photography has been his primary medium. Udé is a dual citizen of the United States and Nigeria. Udé's paintings and drawings are less well known than his photography, though critics and art historians have recognized his early work. The late Henry Geldzahler, said of Udé's paintings and works on paper: "I am touched and amazed at the ways in which he manages to blend invisibly the modernist tradition with his own Nigerian roots. There is never anything forced in the conjunction; air and light seem to be his media." Udé began his Cover Girls series in 1994. Each photograph imitates the cover of a popular fashion or lifestyle magazines, in which the artist himself is featured as the model. (ala the work of Cindy Sherman) The photographs were consciously stylized, posed, photographed and then paired with type matching that of the respected magazine. At first glance, each photograph appears to be an authentic magazine cover. Udé used the magazine cover as a stage to critique the fetishism of the upper class white model and the effects of popular culture on today's consumerist society. The series was exhibited in 1994 in the New York City gallery Exit Art. Udé's black and white series of photographs, Uli, references both high fashion and Uli body art, wall motifs from Udé's Igbo heritage. The photographs explore the anonymity of the inscribed and disembodied self. Udé's dynamic use of light, namely the chiaroscuro effect, serves as a critical compositional element in the series. Udé's Beyond Decorum series, begun in 1999, juxtaposes photographs of men's shirts and women's pumps with suggestive personal advertisements in place of the clothing tags. With its accompanying book, Beyond Decorum: Photographs by Iké Udé, the series traveled across the United States and Canada. The exhibition was shown at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Portland, Maine; OBORO in Montreal, Canada; Sert Gallery; Carpenter Center at the Harvard University Art Museum; and MAK Museum in Vienna, Austria before traveling for two more years internationally. Udé's Paris Hilton: Fantasy and Simulacrum is a conversation between his alter ego, Visconti, and the celebrity Paris...
Category

1990s Conceptual Color Photography

Materials

Photographic Paper, C Print, Color

Strike
By Alia Ali
Located in New Orleans, LA
Archival pigment print, mounted, UV laminated, frame upholstered by the artist Edition of 3 + 2 AP Alia Ali ( عاليه علي ) is a Yemeni-Bosnian-US multi-media artist. A child of migrant linguists, Ali has traveled to sixty-seven countries, lived in and between seven, and grown up among five languages. Her migrations have led her to process the world through interactive experiences and the belief that the damage of translation and interpretation of written language has dis-served particular communities, resulting in the threat of their exclusion, rather than a means of understanding. As an artist who exists on the borders of identifying as West Asian, Eastern European, a United States citizen, queer, culturally Muslim yet spiritually independent, her work explores cultural binaries, challenges culturally sanctioned oppression, and confronts conflicted notions of gender, politics, media, and citizenship. Working between photography, video, and installation, Ali’s work addresses the politicization of the body, histories of colonization, imperialism, sexism, and racism through projects that take pattern and textile as their primary motif. Textile, in particular, has been a constant in Ali’s practice. Her strong belief that textile is significant to all of us, reminds us that we are born into it, we sleep in it, we eat on it, we define ourselves by it, we shield ourselves with it, and eventually, we die in it. While it unites us, it also divides us physically and symbolically. Her work broadens into immersive installations utilizing light, pattern, and textile to move past language and offer an expansive, experiential understanding of self, culture, and nation. Alia Ali’s work has been featured in the Financial Times, Le Monde, Vogue Arabia...
Category

2010s Contemporary Photography

Materials

Fabric, Archival Pigment

Strike
Price Upon Request
Useful Object Cut - Contemporary, Legs, Woman, High Heels, Vertical, Pop Art
By Mihai Florea
Located in Baden-Baden, DE
Useful Object Cut, 2009 Oil on canvas, wooden box, knife 47.24 H x 27,55 W x 11,81 D in 120 H x 70 W x 30 D cm In the "Useful Objects" series, the woman is identified with the p...
Category

Early 2000s Pop Art Mixed Media

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Harsha, Protrait. From The Series The Third Gender of India
By Jill Peters
Located in Miami Beach, FL
The term "hijra" applies to a very diverse group of people in India who identify as third gender. They can range from a natural born hermaphrodite to a male cross dresser. Dating bac...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Modern Color Photography

Materials

Color, Archival Pigment