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Puppet

Explore Kiki Smith’s ‘Puppet’: a surreal collage of fragmented figures in blues & whites. Surrealism, assemblage art, & unsettling beauty – a complex exploration of isolation.

Kiki Smith (b. 1954) is a German-American artist exploring the body, mortality & nature through visceral sculptures, prints & tapestries. A key contemporary figure confronting AIDS & gender.

احصل على صورة رقمية عالية الدقة ومعزّنة، بجودة تفوق بكثير المعاينة عبر الإنترنت.

يتم إعداد كل ملف بعناية فائقة من قبل متخصصينا الداخليين باستخدام أدوات متقدمة ولمسات يدوية خبيرة. نضمن أن تتمتع كل صورة بوضوح استثنائي، ودقة لونية متناهية، وتفاصيل دقيقة.

يتم تسليم الملف النهائي عبر البريد الإلكتروني في غضون 72 ساعة، وهو مُحسَّن للاستخدام الفوري في المجالات المهنية والتحريرية ومجالات الطباعة. هذه هي ذات الجودة التي تعتمد عليها كبرى استوديوهات التصميم ودور النشر والمعارض الفنية المرموقة.

صورة رقمية

حمّل ملفاً عالي الدقة للعرض الشخصي، والطباعة، والمشاريع الإبداعية.

إجمالي السعر

$9.99

مزايا مُضمّنة في كل طلب صورة رقمية

تسليم رقمي احترافي، مضمون

عندما تختار WahooArt.com، فأنت لا تحصل على مجرد صورة فحسب، بل ستحصل على عمل فني رقمي مُحسّن باحترافية، صُمم بدقة متناهية ومصحوب بضمان الرضا. إليك كل ما يتضمنه طلبك تلقائياً:

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تسليم سريع عبر البريد الإلكتروني

ستصلك ملفات صورك الرقمية عالية الدقة عبر البريد الإلكتروني في غضون 72 ساعة من إتمام الطلب - لتكون جاهزة للاستخدام الفوري.

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ملف رقمي مُحسّن بالذكاء الاصطناعي

يتم تحسين عملك الفني باحترافية باستخدام أدوات الذكاء الاصطناعي المتقدمة والتحرير اليدوي، لضمان أقصى درجات التفاصيل والوضوح ودقة الألوان.

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إعادة إرسال مجانية مدى الحياة

هل حذفت ملفك أو فقدته عن طريق الخطأ؟ لا تقلق - سنعيد إرساله إليك في أي وقت، ومجاناً.

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بدون رسوم استيراد - على الإطلاق

استمتع بأعمالك الفنية فوراً دون أي رسوم جمركية أو ضرائب أو مصاريف شحن - فالتحميلات الرقمية دائماً ما تكون معفاة من الضرائب.

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ضمان دقة الألوان

نحن نضمن أن تعكس صورتك الرقمية الألوان الأصلية بأقصى قدر ممكن من الدقة، وذلك باستخدام أدوات احترافية وتقنيات إدارة الألوان.

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ضمان الرضا لمدة 60 يومًا

إذا لم تكن راضياً عن صورتك الرقمية، فسنقوم بتعديلها أو استرداد 100% من قيمتها خلال 60 يوماً - دون أي أسئلة.

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ضمان استعادة الأموال بنسبة % 100

لم تكن راضياً؟ احصل على استرداد كامل المبلغ خلال 60 يومًا من استلام ملفك الرقمي - دون أي أسئلة.

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خصومات الطلبات الكبيرة

اشتري 3 صور، ووفر 10% - اشتري 5، ووفر 15% - اشتري +10، ووفر 20%. مثالية للمشاريع الإبداعية، والمعارض، والوكالات.

أعمال فنية ذات صلة


السيرة الذاتية للفنان

Early Life and Formation

Kiki Smith, born in Nuremberg, Germany, in 1954, carries within her artistic lineage a powerful inheritance. As the daughter of renowned Minimalist sculptor Tony Smith and actress/opera singer Jane Lawrence, she was immersed in a world where creative expression wasn’t merely a pursuit but a way of life. This early exposure to her father's geometric precision instilled in her an understanding of formal craftsmanship, while her mother’s theatricality perhaps fostered a sensitivity to narrative and emotional resonance. The family relocated to the United States when Smith was just an infant, settling in South Orange, New Jersey, a move that would shape her cultural identity as a German-American artist. Her upbringing within the Catholic Church, coupled with a profound fascination for the human body – its fragility, resilience, and inherent symbolism – became foundational elements of her artistic vision. These seemingly disparate influences—geometric abstraction, performance, religious iconography, and anatomical study—would converge in her later work, creating a unique and compelling aesthetic language. The seeds of her future explorations were sown early, nurtured by both intellectual rigor and emotional depth.

New York Emergence and Artistic Awakening

Smith’s artistic journey truly began to unfold upon her arrival in New York City in 1976. Joining Collaborative Projects (Colab), an artist collective operating on the fringes of the established art world, proved pivotal. Colab provided a fertile ground for experimentation, encouraging unconventional materials and radical approaches to art-making. This immersion into the vibrant, often chaotic energy of the East Village scene liberated Smith from traditional constraints, allowing her to explore themes previously considered taboo or marginalized. A brief but impactful period working as an emergency medical technician in 1984 further intensified her focus on the physicality of the human body. Witnessing life and death firsthand, dealing with trauma and vulnerability, profoundly affected her artistic sensibilities, leading her to sculpt body parts—internal organs, skeletal structures—with a visceral realism that challenged conventional notions of beauty and representation. The personal tragedies of losing both her father in 1980 and her sister Beatrice to AIDS in 1988 served as catalysts for an even deeper investigation into mortality, the fragility of existence, and the social implications of illness and loss.

Themes of Body, Gender, and Mortality

Kiki Smith’s work is characterized by a fearless confrontation with challenging subjects—sex, birth, regeneration, gender, nature, and the often-uncomfortable realities of bodily functions. She doesn't shy away from exploring the messy, imperfect aspects of human existence, using her art as a platform to address social issues and provoke dialogue. Her exploration of bodily fluids – blood, urine, menstrual fluid – was particularly groundbreaking, imbued with potent symbolism related to the AIDS crisis and women’s rights. These materials, often considered taboo or unclean, became powerful metaphors for vulnerability, resilience, and societal stigma. Smith's sculptures frequently depict female figures, not as idealized representations but as complex individuals grappling with their own physicality and identity. Her prints, too, are imbued with this same raw honesty, utilizing techniques like screen printing and aquatint to create images that are both beautiful and unsettling. Works such as “All Souls” (1988), a large-scale screen print featuring repetitive images of a fetus, and "Virgin with Dove" demonstrate her mastery of these mediums while simultaneously addressing themes of creation, loss, and the sacred feminine.

Major Works and Lasting Legacy

Throughout her career, Smith has consistently pushed boundaries, creating works that are both deeply personal and universally resonant. “Mary Magdalene” (1994), a sculpture crafted from silicon bronze and forged steel, exemplifies her ability to reinterpret classical iconography through a contemporary lens. The figure’s exposed anatomy and vulnerable posture challenge traditional representations of the saint, inviting viewers to contemplate themes of sin, redemption, and female agency. "Standing" (1998), a monumental sculpture of a woman perched atop a eucalyptus tree, speaks to humanity's complex relationship with nature, while “Homespun Tales” (2005), an acclaimed installation at the Venice Biennale, showcased her skill in creating immersive environments that engage multiple senses. More recently, "Lodestar" (2010) and her commission for the Eldridge Street Synagogue demonstrate a continued exploration of form and light, utilizing stained glass to create ethereal figures that seem to transcend earthly boundaries. Kiki Smith’s impact on contemporary art is undeniable. Her work has been widely exhibited in museums around the world—including MoMA, the Whitney, and the Guggenheim—and she has received numerous awards and honors, including election to the American Academy of Arts and Letters. She is recognized as a pivotal figure whose unflinching exploration of challenging subjects has profoundly influenced feminist art, contemporary sculpture, and our understanding of the human condition. Her legacy lies not only in her innovative techniques and compelling imagery but also in her courage to confront difficult truths and give voice to marginalized experiences. She remains a vital force in the art world, continuing to inspire generations of artists with her unwavering commitment to honesty, vulnerability, and artistic innovation.
Kiki Smith

Kiki Smith

1954 -