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Carlos Medina
Carlos Medina, Rain Cylinder, 1999-2021, Spatial Intervention

1999-2021

About the Item

Carlos Medina Rain Cylinder, 1999-2021 Spatial intervention of 60 pieces Polished aluminum carving pieces and nylon Drops. 6.3 in. 16 cm ea. Price: $1,800.00 each drop / $108,000.00 for this spatial intervention of 60 pieces CARLOS MEDINA. Venezuelan sculptor, graduated in Pure Art and Art History at the School of Plastic Arts of Caracas. Harvest successes from a young age: at the age of 22 he held his first solo exhibition at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Caracas. At the age of 25, the Italian government gives him a scholarship to train in Carrara, Italy, staying for seven years and projecting his activity towards central Europe. With twenty-two exhibitions in national and international Museums, recognized for his participation in symposia and biennials in America, Asia and Europe. He is currently living in Paris, and is represented by important European galleries. In the US, he has been an Ascaso Gallery artist since 2013, attending fairs and presenting four emblematic exhibitions in Caracas and Miami. He is the creator of twenty-six monumental public works and worthy of more than twenty national and international recognitions. Always within the geometric abstraction, its innovative proposals on the wall or with the intervention of sculptural spaces, represent the essential and imperceptible geometrization of universe.
  • Creator:
    Carlos Medina (1953, Venezuelan)
  • Creation Year:
    1999-2021
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 6.3 in (16.01 cm)Width: 1.37 in (3.48 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
  • Gallery Location:
    Miami, FL
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU161328903942

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Maqueta Armonía de Volúmenes y Espacios -La Hoyada- BMPC-002, 1980(1982) Edition /25 Bronze 48 x 37 x 26 cm 18.8 x 14.5 x 10.2 in. ABOUT THE ARTIST Narváez was born in Porlamar, Venezuela, in 1905; he was the fifth son of eleven siblings; his parents were Jose Lorenzo Narváez and Vicenta Rivera. Don José Lorenzo, a multifaceted and creative man, sowed the seed of creativity in his son. “My father did not fit in with his fantasies of cabinetmaker, bricklayer, master builder, and self-taught architect.”1 From an early age, Francis was led to the artistic activity, he traced, carved, made replicas of the furniture and the saints restored by his father. In 1920 he obtained his first professional assignment, a San Rafael for the Church of Carupano, and, in 1922, his father authorized him to travel to Caracas to pursue his studies as an artist. 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