Agostino Bonalumi
Italian
Italian abstract artist Agostino Bonalumi is renowned for his estroflessioni works or painting objects from 1960 to present.
1/2Bonalumi uses special substructures in wood or metal to break the evenness of the canvas that lent it a plastic relief,
Thomas Rentmeister
German
Rentmeister’s works take as their subject the uncritical hedonism of our time. He questions the vulnerability of existence and verifies art’s claim to perpetuity, finality and clarity.
#artbasel#germanartist#nft#nftbzl#miami#artwork#installation
Alicja Kwade
Polish
Alicja Kwade’s spare, elegant mixed-media works use elements of doubling, mirrors, and repetition as they challenge viewers to rethink how their bodies inhabit space and time.
Her sculptures are simple arrangements creating kinetic patterns in response to the environments in which they are placed. Wood orders the accidental and makes us reflect on the experience of seeing.
“My work is a continual exploration of light and it never fails to surprise me”
(2/2)that ultimately captures the dynamism that exists between these aesthetic elements. Simeti’s monochrome shaped canvases are examples of pure formalism that helped pioneer the now well-established idea that paintings can be three-dimensional art objects.
#turisimeti#nft
Turi Simenon
Italian
(1/2)Simeti’s work explores the play of light on shapes created on monochromatic and tactile canvas surfaces. His works exist not as single entities but as an active experience of colour, shape and shadows
#artbasel#nftbzl#miami#crypto#generativeart
2/2He crosses boarders by combining design, science, technology, and art in projects that aim to achieve maximum welfare for human beings. Air, water, light, and sound are amongst his favorite materials to create his science-inspired humanistic projects
#digitalart#generativeart
Gisela Colon
Canadian
“I love minimalism because it embodies that universal energy that anyone can tap into. It’s very democratic, you don’t have to be knowledgeable about art to have a visceral connection to the work because it’s so pure.”
Larry Bell
American
“Although we tend to think of glass as a window, it is a solid liquid that has at once three distinctive qualities: it reflects light, it absorbs light, and it transmits light all at the same time.”