Ayman Baalbaki (Lebanese, b. 1975)
Lots are subject to 5% import Duty on the importat… Read more THE PROPERTY OF A PRIVATE COLLECTOR, LONDON
Ayman Baalbaki (Lebanese, b. 1975)

Untitled

Details
Ayman Baalbaki (Lebanese, b. 1975)
Untitled
signed in Arabic, signed and dated 'Ayman Baalbaki 2010' (on the reverse)
acrylic on fabric mounted on canvas
59 x 79in. (150 x 200.8cm.)
Painted in 2010
Provenance
Luce Gallery, Torino.
Rose Issa Projects, London.
Acquired from the above by the present owner.
Literature
R. Issa (ed.), Ayman Baalbaki Beirut Again and Again, London 2011 (illustrated in colour, pp. 48-49).
Exhibited
Torino, Luce Gallery, Ayman Baalbaki, Ciel Chargé de Fleurs, 2010.
Liverpool, The Bluecoat Centre for the Contemporary Arts, Arabicity: Such a Near East, 2010 (illustrated in colour, p. 24).
Special notice
Lots are subject to 5% import Duty on the importation value (low estimate) levied at the time of collection shipment within UAE. For UAE buyers, please note that duty is paid at origin (Dubai) and not in the importing country. As such, duty paid in Dubai is treated as final duty payment. It is the buyer's responsibility to ascertain and pay all taxes due.

Brought to you by

Bibi Zavieh
Bibi Zavieh

Check the condition report or get in touch for additional information about this

If you wish to view the condition report of this lot, please sign in to your account.

Sign in
View condition report

Lot Essay

Descending from a family of artists, it may have seemed natural for Ayman Baalbaki to depart on an artistic journey of his own. However, his unique orchestration of technique and subject matter combine to create fascinating canvases that remain true reflections of his personal style and inspirations. Describing his initial works as 'polite' and 'soft,' he appreciated that it took time and a growing passion for artistic production to define his technique. Now, the energetic flare that has become synonymous to his paintings have made him one of the Middle East's most expressive artists.
This present work, part of a collection entitled Destruction & Loss, exudes a myriad of personal and technical complexities. Baalbaki recounts that studying art in Paris proved to be an important time of self-introspection. Projecting his feelings of aggression and defensiveness onto his works, these visceral explorations stem from the displacement, loss and instability he experienced growing up in a war-riddled society. Born in Lebanon in 1975, the year of the Lebanese Civil War, these intense emotions critically inform Baalbaki's visual language. Each of his expressionist-like brushstrokes is imbued with a dynamic sense of chaos, heightened through the generous application of paint and exaggerated use of colour. Filling the entirety of the picture plane, Baalbaki's technical mastery combines a unique formulation of space and dimensionality to breathe new life into the reconstruction of war-plagued buildings. Baalbaki gracefully brings together the beauty of form and colour with the roughness and brutality of the reality that surrounded him throughout his life, making this monumental work of his most striking compositions.

More from Modern & Contemporary Art

View All
View All