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Fine etching and collage, hand-signed and numbered by the artist. Manolo Valdés’s Still Life I (1986) is an etching with collage that transforms a familiar object—a stamped envelope—into a layered, contemplative composition. The tilted envelope, complete with postage marks and colorful stamps, becomes both subject and surface, intersected by gestural lines and textured shading. The combination of printed imagery and hand-worked etching introduces a tension between communication and abstraction, as if the message has been obscured or reimagined. Produced in an edition of 100, the work reflects Valdés’s interest in everyday materials and his reinterpretation of still life through fragmentation, memory, and visual play.
Still Life I, 1986
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32 x 23.5 cm
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Details
Artist
Styles
Fine etching and collage, hand-signed and numbered by the artist. Manolo Valdés’s Still Life I (1986) is an etching with collage that transforms a familiar object—a stamped envelope—into a layered, contemplative composition. The tilted envelope, complete with postage marks and colorful stamps, becomes both subject and surface, intersected by gestural lines and textured shading. The combination of printed imagery and hand-worked etching introduces a tension between communication and abstraction, as if the message has been obscured or reimagined. Produced in an edition of 100, the work reflects Valdés’s interest in everyday materials and his reinterpretation of still life through fragmentation, memory, and visual play.
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Manolo Valdés
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Limited Edition Print
Collage
Currently Not Available
Manolo Valdés
Mujer Con Sombrero IV , I, 2002
Limited Edition Print
Mixed Media
Currently Not Available
Manolo Valdés
Retratro De Mujer Con Mantilla, 1992
Limited Edition Print
Mixed Media
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What is pop-art?
Pop Art is an art movement that began in Britain in 1955 and in the late 1950s in the U.S. It challenged traditional fine arts by incorporating imagery from popular culture, such as news, advertising, and comic books. Pop Art often isolates and recontextualizes materials, combining them with unrelated elements. The movement is more about the attitudes and ideas that inspired it than the specific art itself. Pop Art is seen as a reaction against the dominant ideas of Abstract Expressionism, bringing everyday consumer culture into the realm of fine art.
