Dubuffet, Jean
JEAN DUBUFFET Inspection of the Territory, 1974
Title
$125.00
Sku: MI1241
Artist: Jean Dubuffet
Title: Inspection of the Territory
Year: 1974
Signed: No
Medium: Serigraph
Paper Size: 33.5 x 23.5 inches ( 85.09 x 59.69 cm )
Image Size: 26.75 x 19.5 inches ( 67.945 x 49.53 cm )
Edition Size: 1000
Framed: No
Condition: A: Mint
Additional Details: Created for an exhibition titled The Hourloupe Cycle held at Pace Columbus in Ohio in the mid seventies. Jean Dubuffet is known for his non-painterly paintings. The Inspection of the territory is a good example of his work. It is a silk-screen on thick paper, plate signed lower left but not numbered. The Inspection of the Territory is part of Jean Dubuffet’s Hourloupe cycle, created for an exhibition at Pace Columbus in Ohio in the mid-1970s. Known for his non-painterly approach, Dubuffet invites viewers to explore this abstract “territory” of interlocking shapes and patterns, blurring boundaries between reality and imagination. This silk-screen on thick paper is plate-signed in the lower left but not numbered, embodying Dubuffet’s vision of fragmented landscapes and unconventional forms.
Artist: Jean Dubuffet
Title: Inspection of the Territory
Year: 1974
Signed: No
Medium: Serigraph
Paper Size: 33.5 x 23.5 inches ( 85.09 x 59.69 cm )
Image Size: 26.75 x 19.5 inches ( 67.945 x 49.53 cm )
Edition Size: 1000
Framed: No
Condition: A: Mint
Additional Details: Created for an exhibition titled The Hourloupe Cycle held at Pace Columbus in Ohio in the mid seventies. Jean Dubuffet is known for his non-painterly paintings. The Inspection of the territory is a good example of his work. It is a silk-screen on thick paper, plate signed lower left but not numbered. The Inspection of the Territory is part of Jean Dubuffet’s Hourloupe cycle, created for an exhibition at Pace Columbus in Ohio in the mid-1970s. Known for his non-painterly approach, Dubuffet invites viewers to explore this abstract “territory” of interlocking shapes and patterns, blurring boundaries between reality and imagination. This silk-screen on thick paper is plate-signed in the lower left but not numbered, embodying Dubuffet’s vision of fragmented landscapes and unconventional forms.