Fictional Advertisement Poster - Delorean Print Daniel Arsham
Fictional Advertisement Poster - Delorean Print Daniel Arsham
Fictional Advertisement Poster - Delorean Print Daniel Arsham
Fictional Advertisement Poster - Delorean Print Daniel Arsham
Fictional Advertisement Poster - Delorean Print Daniel Arsham
Fictional Advertisement Poster - Delorean Print Daniel Arsham
Fictional Advertisement Poster - Delorean Print Daniel Arsham
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Fictional Advertisement Poster - Delorean Print Daniel Arsham
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Fictional Advertisement Poster - Delorean Print Daniel Arsham
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Fictional Advertisement Poster - Delorean Print Daniel Arsham
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Fictional Advertisement Poster - Delorean Print Daniel Arsham
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Fictional Advertisement Poster - Delorean Print Daniel Arsham
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Fictional Advertisement Poster - Delorean Print Daniel Arsham
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Fictional Advertisement Poster - Delorean Print Daniel Arsham

Fictional Advertisement Poster - Delorean

Vendor

Daniel Arsham

Regular price
£688.18
Sale price
£688.18
Regular price
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Dimensions: 24 x 36 Inches

Medium: Signed Offset lithograph on fine art matte paper

Provenance: Hand-signed by the artist. Comes with original Louis / Buhl & Co. certificate of authenticity.

Edition: Limited Edition of 250

Year: 2021

Condition: Excellent


ABOUT THE ARTIST

Daniel Arsham’s uchronic aesthetics revolves around his concept of fictional archaeology. Working in sculpture, architecture, drawing and film, he creates and crystallizes ambiguous in-between spaces or situations, and further stages what he refers to as future relics of the present. They are eroded casts of modern artifacts and contemporary human figures, which he expertly makes out of some geological material such as sand, selenite or volcanic ash for them to appear as if they had just been unearthed after being buried for ages. Always iconic, most of the objects that he turns into stone refer to the late 20th century or millennial era, when technological obsolescence unprecedentedly accelerated along with the digital dematerialization of our world. While the present, the future and the past poetically collide in his haunted yet playful visions between romanticism and pop art, Daniel Arsham also experiments with the timelessness of certain symbols and gestures across cultures.