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Brooklyn Bridge

Robert Indiana

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Description

Provenance: Il bello dell arte moltiplicata
Dimensions: 80,8 x 80,8 cm
Signature: Pencil signature
Product conditions: Mint
Technique: Silkscreen printing

 

ROBERT INDIANA

Born Robert Clark on September 13, 1928, in New Castle, Indiana, he was an American artist associated with the Pop Art movement. Since the 1960s, Indiana has played a central role in the development of assemblage art, hard -edge and pop art, becoming one of the pre-eminent figures in American art. In 1956, he moved to New York, where he met Ellsworth Kelly and settled in Coenties Slip, a community of artists that included Kelly, Agnes Martin, James Rosenquist and Jack Youngerman. The environment of Coenties Slip had a profound impact on the artist’s work, and he began to create works that incorporated words and numbers, inspired by materials found in abandoned warehouses in the area. Indiana’s works often feature bold, iconic images, such as numbers and short words like EAT, HUG and LOVE. His best-known work is undoubtedly the word LOVE, which was first created in 1964 for a Christmas card from the Museum of Modern Art.Read More