Mad Max
A+B Gallery•Nov 26, 2022 — Jan 28, 2023
Artists
More exhibitions at A+B Gallery
Similar exhibitions
Press release
A+B Gallery presents Mad Max, Max Frintrop’s third solo exhibition in the gallery spaces, that starts Saturday Nov. 26th, and lasts until Jan. 24th 2023. The artist is exhibiting a new series of pictorial works on canvas, all in large format, as well as an entirely new edition of ten medium-format watercolors. Through the exhibition, the germinative process of Frintrop’s works is highlighted and originated from direct experimentation on paper and is then translated through the use of another technique on canvas.
Frintrop found the Mad Max inscription near his studio and decided to use it as the guiding image of the exhibition. The apocalyptic reference, the universality of an intimate place, and the pun on his own name are just some of the reasons that make this title appropriate for the occasion. Simplicity and multiplicity, particularly for iconographic and symbolic references, are elements of his painting that act on our identity without triggering drama or thought when we...More
Venue
Metadata
Claims
Mad Max
A+B Gallery•Nov 26, 2022 — Jan 28, 2023
Press release
A+B Gallery presents Mad Max, Max Frintrop’s third solo exhibition in the gallery spaces, that starts Saturday Nov. 26th, and lasts until Jan. 24th 2023. The artist is exhibiting a new series of pictorial works on canvas, all in large format, as well as an entirely new edition of ten medium-format watercolors. Through the exhibition, the germinative process of Frintrop’s works is highlighted and originated from direct experimentation on paper and is then translated through the use of another technique on canvas.
Frintrop found the Mad Max inscription near his studio and decided to use it as the guiding image of the exhibition. The apocalyptic reference, the universality of an intimate place, and the pun on his own name are just some of the reasons that make this title appropriate for the occasion. Simplicity and multiplicity, particularly for iconographic and symbolic references, are elements of his painting that act on our identity without triggering drama or thought when we...More