Post-Pop Art
Using the pop-art methods of the 1960s, neo-pop appeared on the New York art scene at the end of the 1980s. Discover the work of the heirs of this movement: the unmissable Jeff Koons, but also Richard Orlinski, Patrick Rubinstein, Peppone, Auguste and Chloé B. Immerse yourself in contemporary pop and colourful works of art!
auguste
France,
1977
benda
Israel,
1990
chloe b.
France,
1979
Uri dushy
Israel,
1963
jisbar
France,
1989
leo & steph
France,
Brasil
masaya
France,
1960
ninu
France,
1980
Richard orlinski
France,
1966
peppone
France,
1970
Johann perathoner
France,
1986
raider
Holland,
2002
Paul rousso
USA,
1958
Patrick rubinstein
France,
1960
Andrea valsecchi
Italy,
1992
Contemporary
Bel-Air Fine Art offers you a selection of show stopping works, produced by artists with international influence. Discover the contemporary universe of sculptors Fred Allard, Annalù, Paul Sibuet, Peppone and Idan Zareski but also the work of Joseph, Cédric Bouteiller, Marco Grassi and many others!
Daniel airam
France,
1958
Craig alan
USA,
1971
Fred allard
France,
1968
Joel amit
Israel,
1982
benda
Israel,
1990
Philippe berry
France,
1956
Stefano bombardieri
Italy,
1968
Stéphane braud
France,
1955
Edouard buzon
France,
1979
ceve
France,
1951
Stéphane cipre
France,
1968
danhôo
China,
1983
Nadia fanelli
Italy,
1977
Mariela garibay
Peru,
1976
Paola grizi
Italy,
1968
Damien hirst
England,
1965
j. leo
France
Laurence jenkell
France,
1965
joseph
France,
1961
Joseph klibansky
Holland,
1984
Jérémy laval
France,
1990
Hedwige leroux
Belgium
Julien marinetti
France,
1967
Isabel miramontes
Spain,
1962
mn.ff - fabiano
France,
1973
Philippe pasqua
France,
1965
Laurence perratzi
France,
1970
Gavin rain
South Africa,
1971
Jean-Philippe richard
France,
1947
Isabelle scheltjens
Belgium,
1981
Sandra shashou
Brasil
Paul sibuet
France,
1986
Hunt slonem
USA,
1951
Micha tauber
Holland,
1967
Filippo tincolini
Italy,
1976
Franck tordjmann
France,
1958
Andrea valsecchi
Italy,
1992
Idan zareski
France,
Israel,
1968
Contemporary Photography
It was at the end of the 20th century that artistic photography obtained its true recognition. Contemporary photography is a fluid and flexible medium, constantly changing, ever more central to artistic practice. Discover the works of Cécile Plaisance, Antoine Rose, Liu Bolin or Christian, essential photographers of this artistic movement.
Guido argentini
Italy,
1966
Niloufar banisadr
Iran,
1973
Liu bolin
China,
1973
Max Steven grossman
Colombia,
1971
j. leo
France
Alison jackson
United Kingdom,
1970
Nemo jantzen
Holland,
1970
Markus klinko
Switzerland,
1961
Hervé lewis
France,
1954
Joel moens de hase
Belgium,
1959
Reka nyari
Finland,
1979
Cécile plaisance
France,
1968
Jean François rauzier
France,
1952
Antoine rose
Belgium,
1974
Patrick rougereau
France,
1960
Philippe shangti
France,
1983
Robert silvers
USA,
1968
Harry skeggs
United Kingdom,
1990
Romain thiery
France,
1988
Anne valverde
France,
1968
Nick veasey
United Kingdom,
1962
Christian voigt
Germany,
1961
Mathieu walter
France,
1976
David yarrow
Scotland,
1966
Hyper/Superrealism
Hyperrealism first appeared in the United States in 1970 at the height of abstraction, minimalism, and conceptual art. Some artists then opted for a more realistic, descriptive approach to paintings and sculptures by making them true to life. Let yourself be surprised by the iconic works of this movement, mainly the sculptures by Carole Feuerman, pioneer of this movement - alongside Duane Hanson and John D'Andrea.
Masters
Find a selection of works by the greatest masters of contemporary art. New realists Arman and Yves Klein, including Robert Indiana, representative of Pop-Art or Jeff Koons, the king of neo-pop kitsch, these artists have marked the history of art through their masterpieces today.
New Realism
The New Realists are a group of European artists created by the art critic Pierre Restany in 1960. It brings together artists such as César, Yves Klein, Arman, Niki de Saint Phalle, Daniel Spoerri and Jean Tinguely around a common statement “new realism = new perceptual approaches to reality”. Bel-Air Fine Art invites you to discover the selection of works specific to this movement
optical art
The term “Op Art” is used for the first time in 1964. It defines a movement that plays with the visual perception of the viewer by producing images that seem to move, distorting the perspective, which imprint another image in our retinas. Discover the works of Patrick Hughes, inventor of the "reverspective", or the kinetic art of Patrick Rubinstein, but also the lenticular illusions of the photographer Cécile Plaisance, the photomosaics of Joel Moens de Hase, and many other works heiresses to Op Art.
street art
During the 1980s a new type of art appeared, the first to utilise urban space: graffiti art. Very quickly, the tags turn into visual masterpieces, and urban art uses a large number of various media, stickers, posters, stencils. The greatest works of Street-Art are on Bel-Air Fine Art: find paintings, serigraphs or sculptures by Mr Brainwash, Alec Monopoly, Onemizer, Jonone and the iconic street-artist Banksy.