Picture "Corridor"

Picture "Corridor"
Quick info
reproduction on Alu-Dibond | size 80 x 120 x 2.3 cm (h/w/d) | suspension device
Detailed description
Picture "Corridor"
Olivier Lacour produces picture compositions that give old buildings and ruins a new splendour. They gain their charm precisely from the fact that their image not only depicts the object but the history inscribed in it. These are "narrative" pictures which receive their perfect attention to detail and maximum colour effect through elaborate printing on Alu-Dibond.
High-quality reproduction on Alu-Dibond behind 3 mm thick acrylic glass, with stable suspension. Size 80 x 120 cm (h/w).
Alu-Dibond for a modern and elegant presentation:
UV-resistant print, brilliant colours in high-resolution display, glossy finish thanks to protective lacquer, 3 mm aluminium composite panel in three layers. Due to the smooth surface, mirror effects may occur depending on the incidence of light.
Producer: ars mundi Edition Max Büchner GmbH, Bödekerstraße 13, 30161 Hanover, Germany Email: info@arsmundi.de
Customer reviews

About Olivier Lacour
The charm of ruins
"More beautiful than a beautiful thing is the ruin of a beautiful thing", Auguste Rodin once said. His compatriot, Olivier Lacour, born in Paris in 1972, would unreservedly agree.
For many years Lacour, the "urban explorer", has been searching for motifs of decay, whereby his particular interest lies in decaying buildings. These can be closed schools, empty factories, abandoned hotels or cinemas.
The first challenge is usually gaining access to the buildings, which is in many cases officially forbidden. But if Lacour succeeds, he creates picture compositions that help the old walls to new splendour. The pictures gain their charm precisely from the fact that their image shows not only the object itself but also the history inscribed in it. They can be described as "narrative" pictures that get their precision and maximum colour effect through the elaborate print on Alu-Dibond.
Once Lacour's work is finished, he leaves a photographed building to its deep sleep again. "Take only photographs and leave nothing but footprints" is the basic rule of the "urban explorer". Leave everything as you found it to future explorers.
A form of presentation favoured by professional photographers and exhibition organizers. Increasingly, artists are creating works for this carrier made of high-tech composite aluminium. The metallic surface creates a synthesis with the colours. White areas of the image are shimmering matt-metallic, depending on the light source, giving the image an elegant and puristic appearance. Thanks to the direct colour pigmentation the details are depicted precisely. Alu-Dibond is long-lasting and resistant.
A process for producing images by the action of light, which became widely known in 1839. Photography quickly became the basis for the expanding image industry that pushed the manually produced pictures, paintings and drawings aside.
The avant-garde painting adopted photographic form elements, to restore the painting’s rightful significance. In the 1920s, many avant-garde painters devoted themselves to photography. With his photographs and photomontages, called "rayographs", the American painter Man Ray developed new means of expression in modern art.
The Pop Art of the 1960s varied and alienated the public photograph through technical means. The American pop artist Andy Warhol (1928 - 1987) is the most famous master of this art movement with his images and image series created in this way.