Stephen James Andrews (1956) - Crowd 2004

Crowd 2004

linocut print on mylar
150 cms x 150 cms (59.1 ins x 59.1 ins)
Lot offered for sale by Waddington's, Toronto at the auction event "Concrete Contemporary Art Auction" held on Thu, Mar 8, 2012.
Lot 37
Estimate: CAD $9,000 - $11,000
Realised: CAD $10,200

Lot description - from the online catalogue*

Provenance:
Private Collection, Toronto.
Notes:
With a mix of drawing, painting, printmaking, and animation, Toronto artist Stephen Andrews questions the role of personal memory and media imagery in contemporary self-understanding using familiar visual tropes: the Ben-Day dots of commercial printing and the digital degradation of pixilated news media, for instance. His well-known monochrome Facsimile series (1991-92) was based on faxed versions of obituary portraits of men who had died of AIDS; the drawings of The Quick and the Dead series (2004) renders media images from the Iraq war in candy-coloured pastels. Known for his dot paintings of crowds, Andrews used his signature pixilated style in The View from Here, a commission for the entryway of Toronto's brand new Trump Tower. The huge three-paneled work is comprised of 500,000 pieces of porcelain, glass, stone and gold tiles creating an image of a multicultural crowd of cheering people. Throughout the last twenty-five years, Andrews has exhibited across Canada as well as in the U.S., Brazil, France, Scotland and Japan. Extensively collected both privately and publicly, Andrews' work can be found in the National Gallery of Canada, the Art Gallery of Ontario, and the Schwarz Art Collection at the Harvard Business School.
Most realised prices include the Buyer's Premium of 18-25%, but not the HST/GST Tax.
(*) Text and/or Image might be subject matter of Copyright. Check with Waddington's auction house for permission to use.
Crowd 2004 by artist Stephen James Andrews