Carte du Surréalisme - Tirage
€190.00

Si le surréalisme était un pays, à quoi ressemblerait-il? Cette carte du Tendre en arpente les territoires rêvés, des Îles Deharme au Mont de Piété, du Val du Dormeur au Maquis de Sade, du Lac Vaché au Golfe du Mal-Aimé. Dédiée aux amoureux du surréalisme, de Dada et des grands poètes qui irriguent notre imaginaire.

Limited edition of the Map of Surrealism, exhibited at Christie’s and available as a print. Signed and numbered limited run of 32 prints, until stocks last.

Carte du Surréalisme, 2024

Édition originale limitée à 32 exemplaires + 4 E.A.

Signée et numérotée au recto.

Tirage pigmentaire fine art sur papier d'art 100% coton à bords frangés.

Dimensions: 31,5 x 48,5 cm (tirage), 24 x 42 cm (image).

Cartographie amoureuse du surréalisme réalisée à l'occasion de l'exposition "Images du Labyrinthe, L'atelier surréaliste. Carte blanche à Audrey Guttman" célébrant le centenaire du Manifeste du surréalisme, septembre 2024, Christie's, Paris.

Cliquer pour agrandir l'image.

 

Making Arrangements - Journal
€20.00

Making Arrangements (2020) is a limited edition artist journal, on finding peace in the midst of chaos.

**Only a few copies left in 2024.

Limited edition of 250 signed and numbered copies.

The centerfold can be pulled apart into a standalone poster & framed.

36 pages, tabloid newspaper format.

Full-color Inkjet printing with durable paper & solvent-free ink.

Sustainably printed in Paris on newspaper presses.

37 x 27 cm closed (15 x 10 in), 52 x 37 cm open (20 x 15 in).

"In Making Arrangements, Audrey Guttman combines collages and poems she has written. One exists without the other, but together they are complementary. The words are supported by images that the artist takes care to leave in a state as close to their original nature as possible. Swathes of bright colour act as vases for the black-and-white floral arrangements taken from an instructional book. Audrey Guttman’s arrangements work based on contrast: between untamed nature and the ordered nature of ikebana, a highly codified art that is shaken up by the artist, and between plants and humans, with plants acting as characters and human bodies adopting the whimsical nature of flowers." - Rebecca Zissmann, PEN Magazine