Fiddler on the Roof

Alexander Kosolapov

Fiddler on the Roof, 1985127 x 61cm50000 USD
Details
MaterialGalleryLocation
oil on canvasGalerie Sebastien BertrandGenève
Description
Human-crafted. AI-refined.

The artwork features a vibrant and surreal landscape with a central figure, a musician playing a violin amidst a dreamlike setting. The composition is dominated by bold, geometric shapes and contrasting colors, including a prominent use of red, orange, and green hues. The figure is stylized and abstracted, with an exaggerated, expressive pose and features. The overall style suggests a blend of Cubist and Expressionist techniques, capturing a sense of movement and emotional intensity. The background includes various elements such as floating shapes, houses, and small figures, creating a fantastical and whimsical atmosphere. The piece appears to convey a sense of joy, energy, and the importance of art and music in the human experience. ...

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Artist
Alexander Kosolapov
1943 , Russian

At the height of the Cold War, Alexander Kosolapov developed an approach to reappropriation and diversion, combining symbols from Soviet political propaganda with American commercial advertising. The idealization of the masses is at work in both of those domains – for its purchasing power in the West and its productive power in the East. The misappropriation of religious symbols and major figures from western art history also enters into his practice, forming the structure of ideological systems that question him and make him react. Kosolapov was one of the first to perform that kind of operation, which has since been taken up by many other artists and even by advertising. Yet he is still the object of censorship in Russia, and though he had been able to continue working there, at least partly, he recognizes that it has recently become impossible. We can also remark that recent events in the West have targeted artistic license and criticism of the sacred. While Kosolapov’s practice visually resembles Pop Art, it does not have the same essence. Warhol wrote that democracy was the fruit of consumerism. Even so, caviar – as emblematic of Russia as Coca-Cola is of the USA – is a luxury product that has not modified the verticality of power but is its very image. That is the intention and subtlety of Alexander Kosolapov’s work which, by apparently simple operations, crystallizes the complex dialectic of the second half of the 20th century. ...

Alexander Kosolapov: Artworks
Gorby (green)
Alexander KosolapovGorby (green), 1991Price on Request
Stalin Malevich
Alexander KosolapovStalin Malevich, 1986Price on Request
Gorby (yellow)
Alexander KosolapovGorby (yellow), 1991Price on Request
Malevich Marlboro
Alexander KosolapovMalevich Marlboro, 199560000 USD
Fiddler on the Roof
Alexander KosolapovFiddler on the Roof, 198550000 USD
Matisse Malevich
Alexander KosolapovMatisse Malevich, 201860000 USD