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Walasse Ting (continued)

Freshness, vitality, and dazzling hues encapsulate Walasse Ting’s (originally named Ding Xiongquan -丁雄泉) depictions of women, flowers, birds, and animals, executed in a forceful and highly individualistic style. Wallasse Ting’s alluring, magical world is one of sensory pleasure, appealing to all who share his passion for the beauty of nature.

Walasse Ting was born in Shanghai in 1929 and briefly studied at the Shanghai Art Academy before leaving China in 1946 to come to Hong Kong, where he exhibited some watercolors in a local bookstore. In 1950, he sailed to France and eventually arrived in Paris with no money, friends, or shelter. He lived as a poor, struggling artist for six years, absorbing the city and being exposed to Western art for the first time, particularly the expressionist movement and the works of Picasso. A significant influence was the Belgian artist, Pierre Alechinsky, who discovered Ting while he slept on bare planks in a small attic room and became his lifelong friend.

Walasse Ting arrived in New York in 1958 at the height of the abstract expressionist period. He befriended American artist Sam Francis, and the movement had a profound impact on his work. Unlike in Paris, Ting was able to paint and sell his work. In his paintings, which at the time were predominantly poetic abstractions in the style of Parisian Chinese artist Zao Wouki, bold drips were visible. It wasn’t until the 1970s that Ting developed his now signature style, using Chinese calligraphic brushstrokes to define the contours, and filling flat color fields with vibrant acrylic paint.

www.ftn-books.com has some highly collectable Ting items available.

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David Robilliard (continued)

Born in Guernsey (GB), passed away in London (GB).

David Robilliard skillfully traversed the line between art and comedy. The self-taught, Guernsey-born artist relocated to London in the late 1970s and forged his own brand of visual poetry, intertwining clever phrases, stylized figures, poignant contemplations on sexuality, companionship, and the urban experience onto blank canvases.

Robilliard was a prominent figure during a pivotal time in both London’s art culture and the emergence of the city’s LGBTQ+ community. Gilbert & George praised their protege and assistant as “the new master of the Modern individual. Observing, pondering, sensing, perceiving, sarcastically commenting – he brilliantly captures the “Existers” ethos of our era.” However, he never took himself too seriously.

David Robilliard contracted AIDS, ultimately leading to his passing at the young age of 36.

www.ftn-books.com has the most important publications now available.

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Mark Brusse (continued)

Mark Brusse (1937), a renowned sculptor, ceramicist, painter, and graphic artist, has resided in Paris since 1961. His father was the acclaimed writer and journalist Marie Joseph Brusse (1873-1941), and among his six brothers, Jan and Peter Brusse (correspondents), filmmaker Ytzen Brusse, architect Henk Brusse, and actor Kees Brusse are well known. He spent his youth in Bergen (NH) and after his father’s death, in Nijmegen where his stepfather’s house burned down during the bombing in 1944. Brusse enrolled in the academy in Arnhem in 1958 (residing at Parkstraat 20). During his studies, he developed a friendship with Klaas Gubbels, Rik van Bentem, Ted Felen, and co-founded NADA, a collective with the aim of breaking into Amsterdam’s art scene. He succeeded and received a grant from the Maison Descartes to live and work in Paris for eight months. In Paris, he encountered the Nouveaux Réalistes (led by Pierre Restany), which included Jean Tinguely and Yves Klein.

In the following years, he spent months abroad regularly, such as in New York (1965) where he met Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, and others, on the recommendation of Cees Nooteboom, Berlin (1970), Japan (1983), Korea (1983), and Benin in Africa.

Death, decay, and their handling in non-Western cultures play a significant role in Brusse’s work, often described as poetic. The Japanese culture, in particular, has had a lasting influence on his art. He works extensively in ceramics and stone, creating wooden assemblages. Additionally, he employs various graphic techniques and creates large paintings.

One of Brusse’s most recognized works is “Hommage a Piet Mondriaan” from 1965, which is housed in the Stedelijk Museum.

www.ftn-books.com has some very early Brusse publications available.

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Klaus Staudt ( 1932)

Renowned German artist Klaus Staudt stands as a prominent figure in Germany’s sphere of constructive-concrete art. Credited as the originator of autonomous reliefs, his creations never fail to evoke new sensations upon revisiting. With adept manipulation of light and shadow, surface and space, as well as form and color, Staudt challenges the conventional modes of perception. The use of Plexiglass proves to be a fitting medium for bringing his ideas to life, owing to its translucent and unobstructed nature. Through the use of strategically placed, simple wooden elements painted in crisp white, Staudt deftly creates a sense of rhythm and structure within the pictorial space. An inquisitive eye and contemplative mind are crucial for fully grasping the depth and complexity of Staudt’s artistic expression.

www.ftn-books.com has some very nice Staudt material now available.

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Pat Andrea (1942)

A human wordsmith, Pat Andrea (1942) is an internationally acclaimed master painter and one of the most prominent figures in European realism and new figurative iconography.

In his 40-year career, his work has been showcased in hundreds of exhibitions, including five retrospectives. It has been featured in some of the most prestigious museum collections in the world, such as MOMA (New York), Centre Georges-Pompidou (Paris), Museo Nacional de Bellas Artes (Buenos Aires), and the Stedelijk Museum (Amsterdam).

Born in The Hague in 1942, Andrea studied at the city’s Royal Academy of Art under Co Westerik. He co-founded the ABN Group with Walter Nobbe and Peter Blokhuis, known as the New Hague School, and held his first solo exhibition in 1965. In 1979, he was selected by art critic Jean Clair to participate in Nouvelle Subjectivité at the Palace of Fine Arts in Brussels, alongside artists like David Hockney, RB Kitaj, and Sam Szafran. Andrea served as a professor at the École Nationale Supérieure des Beaux-arts in Paris from 1998 to 2007, and currently resides and works in Buenos Aires and Paris.

In his paintings, classical quality meets grim neo-expressionism as sexuality, fear, and desire seamlessly intertwine to produce images that are both playful and intensely disturbing. One-act dramas of everyday human emotions, Andrea’s creations delve into eroticism and violence through raw yet delicate depictions of men and women.

www.ftn-books.com has several Pat Andrea publications now available.

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Daniel Buren (1938)

Daniel Buren is a representative, yet also a critic of “institutional critique,” a branch of conceptual art that emerged in the late 1960s. His work is distinguished by the recognizable stripe motif: bands, always 8.7 cm wide, which the artist has referred to as his “visual tool” since 1965. This “visual tool” is not only integrated in places where art is exhibited, but also in the urban landscape, for example on buildings, shop windows, buses, and billboards. Purposefully, he blurs the lines between studio, gallery, museum, and the outside world. As an “institutionally critical” artist, Buren persistently opposes the codes, norms, and values of the art world.

www.ftn-books.com has a nice selection of Buren titles available.

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Richard Paul Lohse (continued)

Born in Zürich in 1902, Richard Paul Lohse had a dream of becoming a painter. However, due to difficult economic circumstances, his wish to study in Paris was not fulfilled. Instead, in 1918 he joined the advertising agency Max Dalang and trained to become an advertising artist. Despite being self-taught, Lohse’s work displayed expressiveness and late cubist elements, especially in his still life paintings.

In the 1930s, his career as a graphic artist and book designer earned him recognition as one of the pioneers of modern Swiss graphic design. In his paintings, he experimented with curved and diagonal constructions. In 1937, Lohse and Leo Leuppi founded Allianz, an association for Swiss modern artists. The following year, he assisted with the organization of the “Twentieth Century German Art” exhibition in London, alongside his brief wife, Irmgard Burchard.

Lohse’s strong political beliefs led him to join the resistance movement, where he met and eventually married Ida Alis Dürner. It was not until 1943 that Lohse made a breakthrough in his painting, standardizing his pictorial methods and developing modular and serial systems. His book “New Design in Exhibitions” was published in 1953, and he became co-editor of Neue Grafik/New Graphic Design in 1958. His systematic and constructive art, as well as his graphic design, gained worldwide recognition through important exhibitions and publications. Lohse passed away in Zürich in 1988, leaving behind a legacy of enigmatic complexity and linguistic dynamism in his works.

www.ftn-books.com has many Lohse titles available.

all the above are available at www.ftn-books.com

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Mark Tobey (1890-1976)

At one point in time, Tobey was an unfamiliar name to me, until I laid eyes on his large-scale works at both the Beyeler and Stedelijk Museums. It was then that I became an ardent admirer.

My journey with Tobey began with a catalogue I acquired two decades ago. Initially drawn to the Wim Crouwel design, I was immediately captivated by Tobey’s pieces within it.

Tobey is renowned for his creation of “white writing” – the superimposition of white or light-colored calligraphic symbols on an abstract background which is itself composed of thousands of intricate brush strokes. This technique, in turn, inspired the popular “all-over” painting style, made famous by Jackson Pollock, another American artist to whom Tobey is often compared.

While Tobey worked on pieces of varying sizes, I find his large works to be the most impressive. For the last 16 years of his life, he resided in Basel, which explains why many of his works still remain there. However, he was also an avid traveler, visiting Mexico, Europe, Palestine, Israel, Turkey, Lebanon, China, and Japan, spreading his art organically across the globe. Despite his travels, the majority of his body of work remains in Switzerland, where he lived for 16 years.

His pieces can be found in prestigious collections, such as the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Tate Gallery in London, Museum of Modern Art in New York City, Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Whitney Museum of American Art. Several posthumous exhibitions have been dedicated to Tobey’s work, including those at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., USA, 1984; Museum Folkwang in Essen, Germany, 1989; Galerie Beyeler in Basel, Switzerland, 1990; and Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía.

www.ftn-books.com has several Tobey titles available.


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Henk Tas (1949)

The Rotterdam-based artist Henk Tas (1949) blends various images from popular visual culture, mass media, and advertising in his photographic works. Through vibrant photography, sometimes combined with other techniques, he crafts his ‘magic photos’ which have been acquired by museums such as Boijmans, Centre Pompidou, and others. In fact, Tas would have preferred to become a rockstar, being a visual artist was his second choice. As a result, his work is always bursting with rock & roll vibes and a hefty dose of glamour. The objects he photographs, often rendered unrecognizable, serve as vehicles for emotions in his eyes.

Beside some original works, www.ftn-books.com has some Henk Tas titles available.

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Günther Uecker (continued)

Günther Uecker, a prominent figure in Düsseldorf’s postwar Group Zero, has dedicated six decades to perfecting his reliefs that feature dynamic arrangements of nails. Born in 1930 in Wendorf, Germany, Uecker pursued his education at the Kunsthochschule Berlin Weissensee and Kunstakademie in Düsseldorf, where he currently resides and creates. Drawing inspiration from Eastern philosophy and Gregorian chants, Uecker began a ritual of hammering nails in the 1950s. To the artist, these materials symbolize protection and the act of creation; he vividly recalls nailing planks over his home’s windows after the Second World War to deter Soviet troops.

By 1957, Uecker had advanced to hammering nails onto canvas, achieving a captivating “sundial” optical effect that played with light and shadow in ever-changing patterns. As his artistic vision evolved, he incorporated lightboxes, rotating discs, television sets, and even furniture – as seen in his notable nail sculpture, “Stuhl” (1963). In 1961, Uecker teamed up with Heinz Mack and Otto Piene to form the anti-expressionist movement Group Zero, which sought to push the boundaries of traditional canvas dimensions and explore the realms of kinetic, serial, and participatory art. Even after the group dissolved in 1966, Uecker continued to push artistic boundaries, incorporating elements of conceptual and land art into his work and designing stage sets for operas. Notable public works include “From Darkness to Light” at the United Nations in Geneva (1978) and a Reflection and Prayer Room for the Reichstag in Berlin (2000). In 2020, he embarked on his latest series, “Lichtbogen,” featuring minimalist paintings with radiant blue and white arcs.

Uecker’s impressive body of work has been featured in solo exhibitions at prestigious museums worldwide. His work has been the subject of retrospectives at the Central House of Artists in Moscow (1988) and the Kunsthalle München (1993), and he has participated in Documenta (1964, 1968, 1977) and the 1970 Venice Biennale. His art is prominently displayed in collections at the Art Institute of Chicago, Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, and Museum of Modern Art in New York, Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, Hamburger Bahnhof in Berlin, and Museum Ludwig in Cologne.

www.ftn-books.com has many titles related to ZERO and Uecker available.