Untitled I - Oil painting on canvas
This is a unique piece
- Artist Basher Martin
- Category Pop Paintings
-
Creation year 2014
- Dimensions 76 x 102 cm
- Technique Oil painting on canvas
About
In this series of paintings and collages, Basher features his signature motif of flawless oil-painted gradated stripes. He activates spaces of sublimated psychological desire, at once familiar and strange for the altered retail scenarios they present. In these complex displays, Basher invokes unspoken drives, and the mundane and exclusive, the highbrow and lowbrow, and the public and private impulses that inform us as consuming individuals.
This piece is in stock and ready to ship
Signed by the artist
This work includes the artist's signature
Regular price € 11.100
Shipping worldwide.
Changed your mind? If you are a consumer you
may return the purchased artwork within 14 days.
Returns are not possible for custom items.
Questions about this piece?
ASK THE SELLERShipping, Returns & Payment
Open tabOur shipping methods are determined by item size, type, fragility and specific characteristics. Shipping costs are calculated based on carrier rates, delivery distance and packing complexity.
Return Policy
On items eligible for returns, consumers have 14 days from delivery to submit a return request. Returns are not eligible for custom-made items. Read our terms of sale
Online Payment
Fp Art Online accepts the following payment methods:
Buyer Protection Guaranteed
We want you satisfied. If you're not happy with the way an item arrived, we'll work with you and the seller to reach an optimal resolution. Read our purchase protection
Basher Martin
Martin Basher was born in 1979 in Wellington, New Zealand and lives and works in New York. The artist received his MFA at Columbia University. He has shown internationally at public and private institutions.
Martin Basher’s painting and sculptural work is situated in the lineage of display-based artistic practices. Working with the languages of retail and advertising, Basher explores the emotional charge of common objects and images. Expanding upon the lineage of display-based artistic practices, Basher’s work taps consumer psychology, sublimated desire and masculine gaze.