Details
Description
This abstract painting features a muted color palette, with soft beige and white tones predominant. The composition is composed of two amorphous, cloud-like shapes that appear to be in motion, creating a sense of fluidity and ethereality. The brushwork is loose and expressive, with visible brushstrokes lending a sense of tactility to the piece. The overall effect is one of tranquility and contemplation, inviting the viewer to engage with the work on an emotional level. The artist's intention may have been to explore themes of impermanence, harmony, or the natural world. ...
Similar Artworks
Yudith Levin creates expressive, gestural paintings that navigate the space between abstraction and figuration. She often uses unconventional supports, such as discarded plywood, bringing a raw immediacy to her compositions. Her paintings feature semi-abstract figures and landscapes formed through spontaneous brushstrokes, evoking emotional depth and a dynamic tension between chaos and order. Levin’s approach embraces ambiguity, deliberately leaving titles and forms open to interpretation. Her works invite viewers to explore the fragile balance between presence and absence, suggesting worlds suspended between nothingness and fullness, decay and flight. This tension reflects a continual investigation into the limits of representation and the complexity of human experience. By combining a humble materiality with powerful expressive force, Levin creates paintings that resonate with both personal and universal themes. Her practice confronts the viewer with a delicate borderline experience, where the familiar is unsettled, and meaning emerges from uncertainty. ...
Dvir Gallery was founded in 1982 by Dvir Intrator to introduce cutting-edge contemporary Israeli artists. In 1994 the gallery broadened its’ representation to include international artists such as Miroslaw Balka, Marianne Berenhaut, Douglas Gordon, Latifa Echakhch, and Lawrence Weiner in its’ program. In 2013, Dvir Gallery combined its’ 3 separate spaces into a 5-story building, the first of its’ kind in Tel Aviv. In 2016, the gallery opened its first gateway to Europe with a branch in Brussels, which strengthen and developed the existing relationship with the international artistic community. Earlier this year, on the occasion of its 40th anniversary, the gallery opened a space in Paris, in the heart of the historical Marais District, emphasizing the special ties and connection the gallery has had, since its beginnings, with the French cultural milieu, collaborating with artists, institutions and private collections. ...