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D*Face

Love won’t tear us apart (Red)

2018

Hand-painted and screen-printed on paper

100 × 70 cm

Ed. 3/5

Location: Montreuil, France

https://www.artransfer.com/web/image/product.template/21503/image_1920?unique=22290c8

4,160 € 4160.0 EUR 4,160 €

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Documents

  • Invoice or proof of purchase
    D*Face - Love won’t tear us apart (Red) - 2018 - Certificat d'authenticité.pdf
  • Certificate of authenticity
  • Other documents

About the artwork

This illusory love scene, with its comic-book feel, has taken hold of North American culture. The shapely blonde woman embraces the man in military garb, a hairstyle that embodies the stereotypes and aesthetics of Roy Lichtenstein's 20th-century pro-militaristic American society. His "skull and crossbones" face and greenish skin probably refer to the number of men who died for their country, glorified and popularized. D*Face reuses the characteristics of Pop Art: thick black outlines and a polka-dot background, known as Ben-Day dots.

Expert opinion

This work, immediately identifiable as the work of D*Face, originates from a monumental fresco in the 13th arrondissement of Paris. His work can currently be seen in the urban art exhibition at the Petit Palais (Paris).

About the artist

Born in 1978, Dean Stockton aka D*Face is an English artist, sculptor and illustrator based in London, and a leading figure in street art. Fascinated since adolescence by the United States and the American Dream, with a passion for skateboarding and drawing, the artist discovered Graffiti and Street Art at the age of 15 thanks to the specialist magazines Subway Art and Spraycan Art. After studying design, he went on to work as an illustrator, developing his street art business in parallel. Recognizable by his use of pop art imagery, reminiscent of Roy Lichtenstein or even Andy Warhol, which includes images of icons such as Marilyn Monroe or the Queen of England, his work draws on American comics. His works deal with society's obsession with celebrities and over-consumption in a darkly satirical way. His frescoes depict highly expressive male or female figures, often accompanied by a comment or thought. In 2005, he opened his own urban art gallery, Stolenspace Gallery, in London. His frescoes can be seen in Barcelona, New York, Tokyo, Miami and Los Angeles, among other places.

Additional info

Signed Framed Proof of authenticity

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