Most often, LGBTQ+ pride is shared with the rainbow symbol. While the rainbow signals shared identity, community and allegiance, lived experiences transcend symbols and slogans. In this pride month, P55.ART highlights artists whose work crosses the rainbow, in recognition that despite increased representation, many aspects of the queer experience are still invisible or one-dimensional.
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Considered the most important Spanish artist of the second half of the 20th century, Antoni Tapies became known for his mixed media paintings that incorporated marble dust, found objects and resin.His highly textured and tactile paintings were influenced by his experience of the politics and environment of the war and the post-war state of the Spanish government.
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Do you like Urban Art? Meet five artists that all lovers of this artistic movement must follow!
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By creating a plastic language with fascinating compositions, the Spanish artistSalvador Dalí (1904–1989) became one of the leading figures of surrealism. This movement, which fits in with the vanguards of the 1920s, proposed the transposition and liberation of the unconscious in plastic experiences. His works «The Temptation of St. Anthony» (1946) and «The Persistence of Memory» (1931) presented at the time a completely innovative way of understanding the irrational, through objects such as melted clocks and extraordinary animals. In addition to being an artist,Salvador Dalí he was a writer, filmmaker and during his career he cultivated his eccentric personality, based on his behavioral...
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