
Details
Artist
Styles
// Moi, Planche 5 by Antonio Saura, created in 1976, is a striking serigraph featuring a distorted, almost haunting face rendered in stark black, white, and gray tones. The face is abstracted with exaggerated eyes and mouth, surrounded by rough, torn edges that give the impression of a ripped, fragmented visage. Saura’s expressive style emphasizes anguish and raw emotion, with jagged lines and high-contrast shading that amplify the unsettling mood of the piece. This work reflects Saura's fascination with the human psyche, presenting a deeply introspective and psychological exploration of identity and distortion, typical of his intense, gestural approach.
Moi, Planche 5, 1976
form
Medium
Size
102 x 73.5 cm
- Inches
- Centimeters
Edition
Price
- USD
- EUR
- GBP
Details
Artist
Styles
// Moi, Planche 5 by Antonio Saura, created in 1976, is a striking serigraph featuring a distorted, almost haunting face rendered in stark black, white, and gray tones. The face is abstracted with exaggerated eyes and mouth, surrounded by rough, torn edges that give the impression of a ripped, fragmented visage. Saura’s expressive style emphasizes anguish and raw emotion, with jagged lines and high-contrast shading that amplify the unsettling mood of the piece. This work reflects Saura's fascination with the human psyche, presenting a deeply introspective and psychological exploration of identity and distortion, typical of his intense, gestural approach.
- Recently Added
- Price (low-high )
- Price (high-low )
- Year (low-high )
- Year (high-low )
Antonio Saura
Serie Abierta (Vibrant Eyes And Abstract Shapes, 1989
Limited Edition Print
Lithograph
EUR 2,950
Antonio Saura
Doña Jerónima De La Fuente (Velázquez), 1991
Limited Edition Print
Lithograph
EUR 1,880
What is Surrealism?
Surrealism began in the 1920s as an art and literary movement with the goal of revealing the unconscious mind and unleashing the imagination by exploring unusual and dream-like imagery. Influenced by Sigmund Freud’s theories of psychoanalysis, Surrealist artists and writers sought to bring the unconscious into rational life, blurring the lines between reality and dreams. The movement aimed to challenge conventional perceptions and express the irrational aspects of the human experience.