العودة

إد موسى  (1926-2018)

 
<div>Franco-Del No. 1 & No. 3, a striking 2006 acrylic on canvas triptych by Ed Moses, measures 79 1/2 x 110 1/2 inches and exemplifies the artist's innovative approach to abstraction. This expansive work is composed of three distinct yet harmoniously integrated panels, each contributing to a dynamic visual narrative. The left panel features a bold expanse of deep pine green, and the solid black of the center panel adds further depth. These two panels rhythmically set up the rightmost panel, which bursts with vigorous, sweeping strokes of gray, black, and white. The textured, almost sculptural brushwork suggests movement and depth, its gestural energy punctuated by two vertical black lines and a subtle green accent, adding structural tension further enhanced by the rust orange border. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Moses, known for his experimental techniques, employs acrylic to achieve a rich, tactile surface that invites close inspection. The work’s large scale amplifies its emotional impact, enveloping the viewer in a meditative yet forceful dialogue between order and chaos. Created in 2006, this piece reflects Moses’ late-career mastery, blending spontaneity with deliberate composition.  </div> <div>Franco-Del No. 1 & No. 3, a striking 2006 acrylic on canvas triptych by Ed Moses, measures 79 1/2 x 110 1/2 inches and exemplifies the artist's innovative approach to abstraction. This expansive work is composed of three distinct yet harmoniously integrated panels, each contributing to a dynamic visual narrative. The left panel features a bold expanse of deep pine green, and the solid black of the center panel adds further depth. These two panels rhythmically set up the rightmost panel, which bursts with vigorous, sweeping strokes of gray, black, and white. The textured, almost sculptural brushwork suggests movement and depth, its gestural energy punctuated by two vertical black lines and a subtle green accent, adding structural tension further enhanced by the rust orange border. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Moses, known for his experimental techniques, employs acrylic to achieve a rich, tactile surface that invites close inspection. The work’s large scale amplifies its emotional impact, enveloping the viewer in a meditative yet forceful dialogue between order and chaos. Created in 2006, this piece reflects Moses’ late-career mastery, blending spontaneity with deliberate composition.  </div> <div>Franco-Del No. 1 & No. 3, a striking 2006 acrylic on canvas triptych by Ed Moses, measures 79 1/2 x 110 1/2 inches and exemplifies the artist's innovative approach to abstraction. This expansive work is composed of three distinct yet harmoniously integrated panels, each contributing to a dynamic visual narrative. The left panel features a bold expanse of deep pine green, and the solid black of the center panel adds further depth. These two panels rhythmically set up the rightmost panel, which bursts with vigorous, sweeping strokes of gray, black, and white. The textured, almost sculptural brushwork suggests movement and depth, its gestural energy punctuated by two vertical black lines and a subtle green accent, adding structural tension further enhanced by the rust orange border. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Moses, known for his experimental techniques, employs acrylic to achieve a rich, tactile surface that invites close inspection. The work’s large scale amplifies its emotional impact, enveloping the viewer in a meditative yet forceful dialogue between order and chaos. Created in 2006, this piece reflects Moses’ late-career mastery, blending spontaneity with deliberate composition.  </div> <div>Franco-Del No. 1 & No. 3, a striking 2006 acrylic on canvas triptych by Ed Moses, measures 79 1/2 x 110 1/2 inches and exemplifies the artist's innovative approach to abstraction. This expansive work is composed of three distinct yet harmoniously integrated panels, each contributing to a dynamic visual narrative. The left panel features a bold expanse of deep pine green, and the solid black of the center panel adds further depth. These two panels rhythmically set up the rightmost panel, which bursts with vigorous, sweeping strokes of gray, black, and white. The textured, almost sculptural brushwork suggests movement and depth, its gestural energy punctuated by two vertical black lines and a subtle green accent, adding structural tension further enhanced by the rust orange border. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Moses, known for his experimental techniques, employs acrylic to achieve a rich, tactile surface that invites close inspection. The work’s large scale amplifies its emotional impact, enveloping the viewer in a meditative yet forceful dialogue between order and chaos. Created in 2006, this piece reflects Moses’ late-career mastery, blending spontaneity with deliberate composition.  </div> <div>Franco-Del No. 1 & No. 3, a striking 2006 acrylic on canvas triptych by Ed Moses, measures 79 1/2 x 110 1/2 inches and exemplifies the artist's innovative approach to abstraction. This expansive work is composed of three distinct yet harmoniously integrated panels, each contributing to a dynamic visual narrative. The left panel features a bold expanse of deep pine green, and the solid black of the center panel adds further depth. These two panels rhythmically set up the rightmost panel, which bursts with vigorous, sweeping strokes of gray, black, and white. The textured, almost sculptural brushwork suggests movement and depth, its gestural energy punctuated by two vertical black lines and a subtle green accent, adding structural tension further enhanced by the rust orange border. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Moses, known for his experimental techniques, employs acrylic to achieve a rich, tactile surface that invites close inspection. The work’s large scale amplifies its emotional impact, enveloping the viewer in a meditative yet forceful dialogue between order and chaos. Created in 2006, this piece reflects Moses’ late-career mastery, blending spontaneity with deliberate composition.  </div> <div>Franco-Del No. 1 & No. 3, a striking 2006 acrylic on canvas triptych by Ed Moses, measures 79 1/2 x 110 1/2 inches and exemplifies the artist's innovative approach to abstraction. This expansive work is composed of three distinct yet harmoniously integrated panels, each contributing to a dynamic visual narrative. The left panel features a bold expanse of deep pine green, and the solid black of the center panel adds further depth. These two panels rhythmically set up the rightmost panel, which bursts with vigorous, sweeping strokes of gray, black, and white. The textured, almost sculptural brushwork suggests movement and depth, its gestural energy punctuated by two vertical black lines and a subtle green accent, adding structural tension further enhanced by the rust orange border. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Moses, known for his experimental techniques, employs acrylic to achieve a rich, tactile surface that invites close inspection. The work’s large scale amplifies its emotional impact, enveloping the viewer in a meditative yet forceful dialogue between order and chaos. Created in 2006, this piece reflects Moses’ late-career mastery, blending spontaneity with deliberate composition.  </div> <div>Franco-Del No. 1 & No. 3, a striking 2006 acrylic on canvas triptych by Ed Moses, measures 79 1/2 x 110 1/2 inches and exemplifies the artist's innovative approach to abstraction. This expansive work is composed of three distinct yet harmoniously integrated panels, each contributing to a dynamic visual narrative. The left panel features a bold expanse of deep pine green, and the solid black of the center panel adds further depth. These two panels rhythmically set up the rightmost panel, which bursts with vigorous, sweeping strokes of gray, black, and white. The textured, almost sculptural brushwork suggests movement and depth, its gestural energy punctuated by two vertical black lines and a subtle green accent, adding structural tension further enhanced by the rust orange border. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Moses, known for his experimental techniques, employs acrylic to achieve a rich, tactile surface that invites close inspection. The work’s large scale amplifies its emotional impact, enveloping the viewer in a meditative yet forceful dialogue between order and chaos. Created in 2006, this piece reflects Moses’ late-career mastery, blending spontaneity with deliberate composition.  </div> <div>Franco-Del No. 1 & No. 3, a striking 2006 acrylic on canvas triptych by Ed Moses, measures 79 1/2 x 110 1/2 inches and exemplifies the artist's innovative approach to abstraction. This expansive work is composed of three distinct yet harmoniously integrated panels, each contributing to a dynamic visual narrative. The left panel features a bold expanse of deep pine green, and the solid black of the center panel adds further depth. These two panels rhythmically set up the rightmost panel, which bursts with vigorous, sweeping strokes of gray, black, and white. The textured, almost sculptural brushwork suggests movement and depth, its gestural energy punctuated by two vertical black lines and a subtle green accent, adding structural tension further enhanced by the rust orange border. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Moses, known for his experimental techniques, employs acrylic to achieve a rich, tactile surface that invites close inspection. The work’s large scale amplifies its emotional impact, enveloping the viewer in a meditative yet forceful dialogue between order and chaos. Created in 2006, this piece reflects Moses’ late-career mastery, blending spontaneity with deliberate composition.  </div> <div>Franco-Del No. 1 & No. 3, a striking 2006 acrylic on canvas triptych by Ed Moses, measures 79 1/2 x 110 1/2 inches and exemplifies the artist's innovative approach to abstraction. This expansive work is composed of three distinct yet harmoniously integrated panels, each contributing to a dynamic visual narrative. The left panel features a bold expanse of deep pine green, and the solid black of the center panel adds further depth. These two panels rhythmically set up the rightmost panel, which bursts with vigorous, sweeping strokes of gray, black, and white. The textured, almost sculptural brushwork suggests movement and depth, its gestural energy punctuated by two vertical black lines and a subtle green accent, adding structural tension further enhanced by the rust orange border. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Moses, known for his experimental techniques, employs acrylic to achieve a rich, tactile surface that invites close inspection. The work’s large scale amplifies its emotional impact, enveloping the viewer in a meditative yet forceful dialogue between order and chaos. Created in 2006, this piece reflects Moses’ late-career mastery, blending spontaneity with deliberate composition.  </div> <div>Franco-Del No. 1 & No. 3, a striking 2006 acrylic on canvas triptych by Ed Moses, measures 79 1/2 x 110 1/2 inches and exemplifies the artist's innovative approach to abstraction. This expansive work is composed of three distinct yet harmoniously integrated panels, each contributing to a dynamic visual narrative. The left panel features a bold expanse of deep pine green, and the solid black of the center panel adds further depth. These two panels rhythmically set up the rightmost panel, which bursts with vigorous, sweeping strokes of gray, black, and white. The textured, almost sculptural brushwork suggests movement and depth, its gestural energy punctuated by two vertical black lines and a subtle green accent, adding structural tension further enhanced by the rust orange border. </div><br><br><div> </div><br><br><div>Moses, known for his experimental techniques, employs acrylic to achieve a rich, tactile surface that invites close inspection. The work’s large scale amplifies its emotional impact, enveloping the viewer in a meditative yet forceful dialogue between order and chaos. Created in 2006, this piece reflects Moses’ late-career mastery, blending spontaneity with deliberate composition.  </div>
فرانكو ديل رقم 1 ورقم 3200679 1/2 × 110 1/2 بوصة.(201.93 × 280.67 سم) أكريليك على قماش

110,000

فرانكو-ديل رقم 1 ورقم 3، لوحة ثلاثية مذهلة من الأكريليك على قماش من صنع إد موزس عام 2006، وهي لوحة ثلاثية من الأكريليك على قماش القماش مقاس 79 1/2 × 110 1/2 بوصة وتجسد نهج الفنان المبتكر في التجريد. ويتألف هذا العمل الواسع من ثلاث لوحات متميزة ومتكاملة في آنٍ واحد، تساهم كل واحدة منها في سرد بصري ديناميكي. تتميز اللوحة اليسرى بامتداد جريء من لون الصنوبر الأخضر الداكن، ويضيف اللون الأسود الصلب للوحة الوسطى مزيداً من العمق. تهيئ هاتان اللوحتان بشكل إيقاعي اللوحة اليمنى التي تنفجر بضربات قوية وكاسحة من الرمادي والأسود والأبيض. توحي أعمال الفرشاة المنحوتة تقريبًا بالحركة والعمق، وتتخلل طاقتها الإيمائية خطان عموديان باللون الأسود ولمسة خضراء خفيفة، مما يضيف مزيدًا من التوتر البنيوي الذي تعززه الحدود البرتقالية الصدئة.





يستخدم موسى، المعروف بتقنياته التجريبية، الأكريليك لتحقيق سطح غني وملموس يدعو إلى الفحص الدقيق. يزيد حجم العمل الكبير من تأثيره العاطفي، ويغلف المشاهد في حوار تأملي وقوي في الوقت نفسه بين النظام والفوضى. تعكس هذه القطعة التي أُنجزت في عام 2006، براعة موسى في أواخر حياته المهنية، حيث تمزج بين العفوية والتكوين المدروس.
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