- Art.Salon
- Artists
- Tseng Shufen
- Simulacrum Image No. 7(Painted In 2014)
Tseng Shufen
Simulacrum Image No. 7(Painted In 2014)
Found at
China Guardian,
Hong Kong
Asian 20th Century and Contemporary Art, Lot 765
2. Oct - 2. Oct 2017
Asian 20th Century and Contemporary Art, Lot 765
2. Oct - 2. Oct 2017
Estimate: 35.000 - 55.000 HKD
Price realised: not available
Price realised: not available
Description
Acrylic on canvas
91.5×73 cm 36×28 3/4 in
Signed in English on edge of the top; signed in Chinese and dated on edge of the bottom
EXHIBITION
7 July – 30 Aug 2017, Traversing—a Wonderland of Real Painting, Lotus Art Gallery, Kaohsiung
Private collection, AsiaTsang Shufen, born in 1982 and a graduate of the Institute of Fine Arts at the National Kaohsiung Normal University, is a highly visible new-generation artist engaged in traditional oil painting. She uses hyper-realistic depiction techniques and creates relief-like textures on canvas to metamorphose her works into the third dimension. In 2016, one of Tsang’s works won a Kaohsiung Excellent Work Award. This comes in addition to the jury prize she was awarded by Murakami’s GEISAI Festival in 2011. Tsang’s works have gained significant recognition within the art world, with some of her pieces being displayed as part of the collections of the National Tai
91.5×73 cm 36×28 3/4 in
Signed in English on edge of the top; signed in Chinese and dated on edge of the bottom
EXHIBITION
7 July – 30 Aug 2017, Traversing—a Wonderland of Real Painting, Lotus Art Gallery, Kaohsiung
Private collection, AsiaTsang Shufen, born in 1982 and a graduate of the Institute of Fine Arts at the National Kaohsiung Normal University, is a highly visible new-generation artist engaged in traditional oil painting. She uses hyper-realistic depiction techniques and creates relief-like textures on canvas to metamorphose her works into the third dimension. In 2016, one of Tsang’s works won a Kaohsiung Excellent Work Award. This comes in addition to the jury prize she was awarded by Murakami’s GEISAI Festival in 2011. Tsang’s works have gained significant recognition within the art world, with some of her pieces being displayed as part of the collections of the National Tai