Quadram Dax - Eduardo Paolozzi
Quadram Dax - Eduardo Paolozzi
Signed Limited Edition Screenprint 67/100
81.5cm x 107cm
Viewings welcome - please contact Cal to arrange an appointment.
About the artwork
“This print comes after Paolozzi's long exploration of mechanistic form through the Kelpra Studio. The image is, while appreciative of Pop developments, sly in its criticism, with Warhol, Lichtenstein, and Johns all receiving jabs, along with the collective weight of the elephantine American dominance over Britain, where Pop may truly be said to have begun, with Paolozzi, Hamilton, and others. A version of the design appeared on the cover of "Studio International" (v. 182, no. 937, Oct. 1971).”
- the Harvard Art Museum collection.
Year: 1971
Unframed size: 76cm x 55.5cm
Framed size: 81.5cm x 61.5cm x 3cm
Detailed Condition: Excellent condition
Signature: Signed and numbered in pencil: “Eduardo Paolozzi, 1971, 423/1000”
Framing: Museum-grade maple frame with contrasting splines and 99% UV-resistant glass to help protect the colours and the paper
Mounting: Conservation-mounted using acid-free Japanese wheat-starch paste and Japanese paper
Delivery: Collect from the shop or contact Cal to arrange specialist art handlers
About the artist
Eduardo Paolozzi (1924 – 2005) was a prolific and inventive Scottish artist most known for his marriage of Surrealism's early principles with brave new elements of popular culture, modern machinery and technology. He was raised in the shadows of World War II in a family deeply affected by the divisive nature of a country involved in conflict, which birthed his lifelong exploration into the many ways humans are influenced by external, uncontrollable forces.
This exploration would come to inform a vast and various body of work that vacillated between the darker and lighter consequences of society's advancements and its so-called progress. His collages reflect the way contemporary culture and mass media influenced individual identity. Some of these, with their appropriation of American advertising's look and feel would inspire the future Pop art movement.