Ei yhteyttä palvelimeen
Online-teemahuutokaupat
Barbie and friends E1136
Huutokauppa:
Chinese Works of Art F512
Huutokauppa:
Curated Timepieces – December F530
Huutokauppa:
A Designer's World E1138
Huutokauppa:
International Modernists F601
Huutokauppa:
Milić od Mačve 7 paintings F592
Huutokauppa:
Helsinki Design Sale F612
Huutokauppa:
Helsinki Spring Sale F613
Huutokauppa:
Live-huutokaupat
Contemporary Art & Design 662
Huutokauppa: 15.−16. huhtikuuta 2025
Important Timepieces 663
Huutokauppa: 15. huhtikuuta 2025
Modern Art & Design 664
Huutokauppa: 20.−21. toukokuuta 2025
Important Spring Sale 665
Huutokauppa: 11.−13. kesäkuuta 2025
328
1246759

Lotta Hannerz

(Ruotsi, Syntymävuosi 1968)
Lähtöhinta
70 000 - 80 000 SEK
6 260 - 7 150 EUR
6 350 - 7 260 USD
Vasarahinta
65 000 SEK
Kuuluu jälleenmyyntikorvauksen piiriin

Lain mukaan ostaja maksaa tästä taideteoksesta taiteilijapalkkion. Enimmäismaksu on 5 %. Mitä korkeampi myyntihinta, sitä pienempi prosenttiosuus. Lisätietoja tästä laista:

Taiteen jälleenmyyntikorvaus Suomen : Kuvasto
Taiteen jälleenmyyntikorvaus Ruotsissa: BUS

Tietoa ostamisesta
Kuvan käyttöoikeudet

Tämän tietokannan taideteokset ovat tekijänoikeudella suojattuja, eikä niitä saa kopioida ilman oikeudenhaltijoiden lupaa. Teokset kopioidaan tässä tietokannassa Bildupphovsrättin lisenssillä.

Lisätietoja ja kuntoraportit
Louise Wrede
Tukholma
Louise Wrede
Asiantuntija, nykytaide, Private Sales
+46 (0)739 40 08 19
Lotta Hannerz
(Ruotsi, Syntymävuosi 1968)

”Curiosity killed the cat”

Executed 2009. Mixed media, wood, papier-maché, canvas, LED-light. Height 200, width 80 and depth 75 cm.

Alkuperä - Provenienssi

Angelika Knäpper Gallery, Stockholm.
Private collection, Stockholm.

Näyttelyt

Angelika Knäpper Gallery, Stockholm, ”Lotta Continua”, 4 November – 5 December 2010.

Muut tiedot

‘Curiosity killed the cat’ is the old English idiom that Lotta Hannerz employs as the title for her compelling artwork. Being curious can sometimes lead to misfortune, something the inquisitive man in the painting with his friendly mien will soon find out. A ‘cat’-astrophe awaits anyone who plans to get through that closed door. Look through the keyhole yourself, if you dare!
Hannerz’s inventive art plays with proportions, optical illusions and puns. Her paintings often defy their two-dimensional surfaces and transform into three-dimensional objects. We think we understand what we’re seeing, but she tricks us at every turn as we encounter layer upon layer of intellectual stunts and art historical passes. Hannerz artistic practice is founded on her own ‘free’ relationship with the great master of surrealism, René Magritte and the Dadaist Marcel Duchamp. Yet, she has made her own way in an absolutely unique manner.
Hannerz works with paintings, objects, sculptures and installations. Everything bears the mark of a very personal expression, where the titles add yet another dimension to the experience of the works. Her palette is one of soft and inviting colours, matched by the streets and the facades of her current home city, Paris. Hannerz’s interiors are inhabited by her characteristic figures, including the balding man in a light-coloured shirt and the woman with round glasses (suspiciously similar to herself). During her time studying at the Royal Institute of Art in Stockholm Hannerz was a ‘Special Student’ to Erik Dietman, whose influence and inspiration can be seen in her work. Not least in the monumental piece Venu?, a large pointing hand that created quite a stir when it was placed in the middle of ‘Strömmen’ (the part of lake Mälaren that runs through the centre of Stockholm), right outside the Royal Palace, for a few months in 2004.
Lotta Hannerz was educated at Konstfack and the Royal Institute of Art in Stockholm. She has had several solo exhibitions, including at Angelika Knäpper Gallery, Stockholm, and Galerie Claudine Papillon in Paris. When Nationalmuseum in Stockholm put on the exhibition of trompe l’oeil work The Deluded Eye – Five Centuries of Deception in 2008, Hannerz’s work was included. She is also represented in several prestigious collections, for example, at Moderna Museet, Malmö Konstmuseum and at the Kunstmuseum in Bonn.