Alberto Giacometti Head of a Man 157 Derriere Le Miroir 1961 Lithograph

Alberto Giacometti
Head of a Man – 157 – Derriere Le Miroir – 1961
Print – Lithograph 15” x 11”
Giacometti’s studio was located in Paris at 46 rue Hippolyte Maindron, off of the rue d’Alésia. He worked there from 1927 until his death in 1965. This lithograph was created during a period in which Giacometti, Swiss born artist, created works reflecting placidness, understatement, and stability of composition, ultimately giving rise to an atmosphere of serenity. Despite the manifest tranquility, rapid execution is suggested by the ease taken in creating the loose lines. Giacometti was accustomed to drawing with lithographic crayon on transfer paper rather than on stone, a technique that created works which resembled crayon drawing. This technique preserved every line Giacometti put down since this particular method made it impossible to erase lines.

From the May 1961 edition of the French art periodical “Derriere Le Miroir” no. 127 with 14 original lithographs, two doublepage published by Maeght Editeur, Paris in new condition

Alberto Giacometti, a Swiss sculpturer painter and drawer, developed in the 1940s a form of depicition where movement and vision meet.

“I make pictures and sculpture to attack reality, to defend myself against death and to be as free as possible.”

$130.00

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Description

Giacometti’s studio was located in Paris at 46 rue Hippolyte Maindron, off of the rue d’Alésia. He worked there from 1927 until his death in 1965. This lithograph was created during a period in which Giacometti, Swiss born artist, created works reflecting placidness, understatement, and stability of composition, ultimately giving rise to an atmosphere of serenity. Despite the manifest tranquility, rapid execution is suggested by the ease taken in creating the loose lines. Giacometti was accustomed to drawing with lithographic crayon on transfer paper rather than on stone, a technique that created works which resembled crayon drawing. This technique preserved every line Giacometti put down since this particular method made it impossible to erase lines.

From the May 1961 edition of the French art periodical “Derriere Le Miroir” no. 127 with 14 original lithographs, two doublepage published by Maeght Editeur, Paris in new condition

Alberto Giacometti, a Swiss sculpturer painter and drawer, developed in the 1940s a form of depicition where movement and vision meet.

“I make pictures and sculpture to attack reality, to defend myself against death and to be as free as possible.”

Additional information

Weight 3 lbs
Dimensions 24 × 5 × 4 in
Artist Name

Certificate of Authenticity

yes

Edition Size

157

Edition Type

lithograph

Framing

Item height

15

Item Length

11

Listed By

Dealer or Reseller

Medium / Type

Item Width

0.1

Date of Creation

Alberto Giacometti Head of a Man 157 Derriere Le Miroir 1961 Lithograph

Alberto Giacometti
Head of a Man - 157 - Derriere Le Miroir - 1961
Print - Lithograph 15'' x 11''
Giacometti's studio was located in Paris at 46 rue Hippolyte Maindron, off of the rue d'Alésia. He worked there from 1927 until his death in 1965. This lithograph was created during a period in which Giacometti, Swiss born artist, created works reflecting placidness, understatement, and stability of composition, ultimately giving rise to an atmosphere of serenity. Despite the manifest tranquility, rapid execution is suggested by the ease taken in creating the loose lines. Giacometti was accustomed to drawing with lithographic crayon on transfer paper rather than on stone, a technique that created works which resembled crayon drawing. This technique preserved every line Giacometti put down since this particular method made it impossible to erase lines.

From the May 1961 edition of the French art periodical "Derriere Le Miroir" no. 127 with 14 original lithographs, two doublepage published by Maeght Editeur, Paris in new condition

Alberto Giacometti, a Swiss sculpturer painter and drawer, developed in the 1940s a form of depicition where movement and vision meet.

"I make pictures and sculpture to attack reality, to defend myself against death and to be as free as possible."

Artist: print this product

In stock