x
1991
62.0 x 95.0 cmلوحة زيتية مرسومة يدوياً على الكانفاس بالمقاس والإطار الذي تفضله، تُنفذ حسب الطلب على أيدي فنانينا.
اختر من بين أحجامنا المُعدّة مسبقًا والتي تتطابق مع النسب الأصلية للعمل الفني.
يمكنك إدخال أبعادك الخاصة لتناسب إطارًا معينًا أو مساحة محددة. وإذا لم يتطابق الحجم الذي اخترته مع نسب الصورة الأصلية، فسنقوم إما بقص العمل الفني أو توسيع اللوحة بإضافة عناصر مرسومة يدويًا. سيتم إرسال نموذج رقمي إليك للموافقة عليه قبل بدء الإنتاج.
يرجى ملاحظة أن المعاينة على الشاشة لا تعكس عملية القص أو التوسيع الفعلية؛ حيث إن النموذج الرقمي وحده هو الذي سيوضح التكوين النهائي بدقة.
وعلى الرغم من توفر أحجام مخصصة، إلا أننا نوصي باختيار أبعاد من القائمة المحددة مسبقًا للحفاظ على النسب الأصلية للعمل الفني.
توصيل عالمي إلى خلال 3 إلى 4 أسابيع بدلاً من المدة المعتادة البالغة 5 أسابيع. (1 يوليو). جودة لا تهاون فيها.
Untitled
مقاس النسخة المطبوعة
Kim Jones, born in San Bernardino, California, in 1944, is an artist whose work has consistently defied easy categorization, occupying a unique space between performance, sculpture, drawing, and installation. His career, spanning over seven decades, is marked by a relentless exploration of the unsettling, the liminal, and the deeply personal—a fascination with the grotesque, the vulnerable, and the enduring power of memory. From his early beginnings as the enigmatic Mudman to his current large-scale installations, Jones’s practice reveals a sustained engagement with themes of isolation, transformation, and the complex relationship between the self and the external world.
Jones's formative years were shaped by a childhood illness that confined him to a wheelchair and then leg braces from ages seven to ten. This experience of physical limitation profoundly influenced his artistic sensibility, fostering a sense of otherness and a preoccupation with the body’s potential for both constraint and transformation. Later, his service in the Vietnam War (1967-1968) further solidified this exploration of conflict, trauma, and the psychological impact of violence—themes that would become recurring motifs throughout his oeuvre. These personal experiences, interwoven with a deep engagement with contemporary art movements like performance art and minimalism, provided the bedrock for his distinctive artistic vision.
In the early 1970s, Jones adopted the persona of Mudman, an instantly arresting figure who emerged onto the Southern California art scene. Dressed in a voluminous mud-caked suit, adorned with a lattice of sticks attached to his back and masked by a nylon head covering, Mudman became a recurring presence on city streets, beaches, subways, and in galleries. This performance artist’s deliberate construction of an outsider figure—a creature both vulnerable and strangely compelling—immediately captivated audiences. Mudman wasn't merely a costume; it was a carefully constructed embodiment of Jones’s own sense of alienation and his exploration of the boundaries between self and other.
The origins of Mudman are rooted in Jones’s early sculptural practice, particularly his use of tightly bound nylon, rope, electrical tape, and foam rubber. These materials—often associated with domesticity and industrial production—were repurposed to create a series of hybrid creatures that blurred the lines between human and animal, organic and artificial. The resulting sculptures, initially small and intimate, gradually evolved into larger-scale installations, reflecting Jones’s growing interest in exploring space and creating immersive environments.
Alongside his performance art, Jones developed a distinct body of drawings known as the “War Drawings.” Beginning in the late 1950s, these intricate, two-dimensional diagrams depict stylized battlefields populated by abstract figures—often referred to as “x-men” and “dot-men”—engaged in an endless cycle of conflict. The drawings are characterized by a meticulous attention to detail, a complex layering of lines and erasures, and a haunting sense of futility. These works are not simply representations of war; they’re meditations on the nature of conflict itself—its cyclicality, its inherent absurdity, and its devastating impact on human lives.
The “War Drawings” emerged from Jones's personal experiences during his service in Vietnam, but they transcend a literal depiction of that conflict. They tap into a broader historical consciousness, referencing ancient myths and legends about warfare and diplomacy. The drawings’ labyrinthine structure mirrors the complexities of human interaction, while their repetitive patterns suggest an inescapable loop of violence.
In recent decades, Jones has shifted his focus to large-scale sculptural installations, often incorporating elements of site-specificity and public engagement. His work for The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum in Hartford, Connecticut, *White Crow*, exemplifies this trajectory. This ambitious installation transformed a grove of crabapple trees into a complex, layered sculpture—a testament to the artist’s ongoing exploration of memory, transformation, and the relationship between the self and the environment.
Jones's installations frequently draw upon his earlier sculptural techniques, utilizing materials such as foam rubber, rope, and nylon to create evocative forms that evoke a sense of both vulnerability and resilience. His work has been exhibited in major museums around the world, including the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in New York, the Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Tate Modern in London, solidifying his position as one of the most significant sculptors working today. His retrospective at the University of Buffalo further cemented this legacy, offering a comprehensive overview of his diverse body of work.
Kim Jones’s enduring influence lies in his willingness to embrace the unconventional, to challenge conventional notions of art-making, and to explore themes that are both deeply personal and universally resonant. His work has inspired generations of artists to push the boundaries of their practice and to engage with complex social and psychological issues. Jones's unique blend of performance, sculpture, drawing, and installation—coupled with his distinctive visual language—has created a body of work that is simultaneously unsettling, captivating, and profoundly moving.
1944 - , United States of America
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