
Details
Artist
Styles
Maitresse Folio Screen-print on hand-made paper; signed, numbered // Allen Jones' Maitresse I (2016) is a bold and provocative screen print on handmade paper, featuring a stylized female figure with exaggerated colors and forms. The figure, dressed in vibrant attire and holding a whip, stands confidently against a warm gradient background of red, orange, and yellow, evoking a sense of theatricality and power. Below her, the word MAITRESSE appears in bold, playful lettering, enhancing the artwork’s connection to themes of dominance and allure. Known for exploring gender and eroticism, Jones uses bright, almost surreal color contrasts to emphasize both the figure’s authority and allure, creating an impactful and dynamic composition.
Maitresse I, 2016
form
Medium
Size
106 x 80 cm
- Inches
- Centimeters
Edition
Price
- USD
- EUR
- GBP
Details
Artist
Styles
Maitresse Folio Screen-print on hand-made paper; signed, numbered // Allen Jones' Maitresse I (2016) is a bold and provocative screen print on handmade paper, featuring a stylized female figure with exaggerated colors and forms. The figure, dressed in vibrant attire and holding a whip, stands confidently against a warm gradient background of red, orange, and yellow, evoking a sense of theatricality and power. Below her, the word MAITRESSE appears in bold, playful lettering, enhancing the artwork’s connection to themes of dominance and allure. Known for exploring gender and eroticism, Jones uses bright, almost surreal color contrasts to emphasize both the figure’s authority and allure, creating an impactful and dynamic composition.
- Recently Added
- Price (low-high )
- Price (high-low )
- Year (low-high )
- Year (high-low )
Allen Jones
Untitled From Concerning Marriages Series, Plate H, 1964
Limited Edition Print
Lithograph
USD 2,400
Allen Jones
Maitresse Folio Screenprint II, 2015
Limited Edition Print
Screen-print
Currently Not Available
What is appropriation?
Appropriation in art involves using pre-existing images or objects with little or no modification. This technique has played a significant role across various art forms, including visual arts, music, performance, and literature. In visual arts, appropriation refers to the practice of adopting, sampling, recycling, or borrowing elements—or even entire forms—of existing visual culture, integrating them into new works to create meaning or critique.