Leilão 30 Israeli Contemporary Art - Young promising artists for investment
Por KooKoo
12.3.22
Ramat Gan, Israel

New year opens with KooKoo, Israel's promising young artists -


For this sale, we combined two opposites: a selection of realistic works by the best artists alongside pop art works: everything is Israeli - everything is contemporary!


Gala Gilan, Roni Yoffe, Avia Halabi and Shani Shemesh lead the sale with fine works of realism - pay attention to the sculpture with the scent of Italy that brought Shani Shemesh to Israel first time with KooKoo


Lena Revanko with six beautiful works that returned to Israel after an exhibition in France,


KOT-ART, which has already been sold in the gallery for thousands of dollars to create with four large and cool pop art works at KooKoo's prices,


Eran Weber with three pulsating drawings!


Julie Filipenko with a beautiful original work for collectors


Isaac Jacobs with particularly large and significant works,


In this sale, we will introduce you for the first time to Shay Katz - a young and interesting artist, Smadar Kilchensky - an Israeli actress and painter, Kobi Zarfati - a realist painter, a graduate of the station, Eyelet Rosenberg and Lior Ron


And also - Bazooka Joe, Orit Akta, Vered Aharonovitch, Naomi Shalev, Mor Rimmer, Yariv Amitai, Michal Worka, Israel Dror Hemed, Diana Kogan, Doron Wolf and many more


KooKoo takes care of you for the best, contact us 0558859447 (Lisa)

Enjoy and good luck :) (As always - prices include VAT and no VAT added)

Mais detalhes
O leilão terminou

LOTE 4:

Naomi Shalev
"Why Sting On Face?" 2021

Vendido por: $120 (₪390)
₪390
Preço inicial:
$ 120
Preço estimado :
$300 - $400
Comissão da leiloeira: 15%
IVA: 17% Sobre a comissão apenas
Utilizadores de países estrangeiros podem estar isentos de pagamento de impostos, de acordo com as respectivas leis de imposto
12.3.22 em KooKoo
identificações: Arte israelita

"Why Sting On Face?" 2021
Collage made of newspapers - framed 
20/20 cm
signed

Meet the best collage artist in the Land of Israel - meet Naomi Shalev
Naomi Shalev, born in Ukraine (1976) is an Israeli artist known for her complex collages.
Naomi lives and works in Yokneam Illit. In her works, Naomi tells her personal story.

Naomi describes her excellent work:
'' I create collages from newspaper clippings from the late 1990s.
My affair with collages began with pornographic magazines. Many years ago, a friend gave me a collection of his Playboy and Hustler magazines - which he no longer needed. I also did not know exactly what to do with that pile ...
I started cutting out pictures and putting them together in funny compositions. I had no better idea at the time. Later I was looking for ways to make larger compositions - I have always loved oversized projects. This is how the technique I work with to this day was born - the use of tears on newspaper pages instead of a brush and paints: painting with newspapers ''.
'' One of the basic elements in my work is suffering. Like any human being, I too have so many unfulfilled desires that will never be expressed, that cause intense mental suffering! This is the statistic - raw material from which, just like pieces of old magazines, I am putting together a new reality - private, much richer and more satisfying than the one I am imprisoned in here, in my physical body. A reality in which I have complete control over how things will look, proceed and develop - something I so miss in the "real" world! "
'' In my works there is always a narrative - a story that is the real reason for the work. A portrait is just a medium through which the story is told. It is true that most of the stories I tell are very personal and even intimate, but at the same time I want to believe that an attentive viewer will be able to "read" them even without knowing me and my life details.
The line between being clear enough to arouse interest and being too verbal is thin and dangerous. But that's exactly what interests me as an artist - to create a readable and recognizable personal symbolic world, but also one that leaves enough room for personal interpretation. "