Michal Ožibko | Jingle
Michal Ožibko | Jingle
Abstraction that arises as a dialogue between the painter and the flat image that determines when and how the creator will enter into himself. Limited edition: 100pcs, numbered, signed by the author.
Print Technique: | giclée, archive 12 -color pigment print |
Paper: | 100% cotton paper Hahnemühle Photo RAG 308G |
Print size / in frame: | 61 × 57 cm / 65 × 61 cm |
Frame: | Wooden with UV plexiglass in the museum standard |
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Michal Ožibko (*1981) is a Czech artist who, in addition to his hyperrealist motifs, and paintings purely non -firm. He completed his studies at the Prague Academy of Fine Arts in the studio of Zdeněk Beran's thesis Escape, whose opponent was Prof. Gordon Graham of the University of Princeton, author of the Book of Art Philosophy. This work with dimensions of 5 x 4 meters is located in the staircase of the Kroměříž Castle. Ideath, which was selected by the jury of the National Portrait Gallery in London for the BP Portrait Award 2010, entered the wider public. Sotheby’s hall.









The painting is one of the six large -format abstract canvases, which I painted from the end of 2019 to 2021. When I work on a work that does not have a predetermined theme, the course of painting is a great adventure from the very beginning. I used to call it a process of corrected coincidence for myself, when I lead a dialogue with a flat image. It looks like I put on the image of the color surfaces, they create a composition that speaks to me and I answer it with more and more brush strokes. This dialogue always takes a different long time, and the resulting image is also different every time, but they still seem to me, my paintings some common denominator, and that will probably be my psyche, without which the work would be formal and futile. In this way of creating an image, the end is also interesting outside the process itself. I will recognize it so that when the image area is so filled with the relationships of surfaces and colors that any other subsequent stain of color would be more complicated rather than harmonized, the painting closes for me and no longer let me go.
Michal Ožibko on Instagram

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