18 works of art. Mother's Day gift.
Nov 16, 2021
Want to make a mother feel unique, special and proud on Mother's Day? You still have time to make the perfect gift. From the RedCollectors team, we have made a selection of 18 totally personalised works of art. Choosing the right gift for a mother is difficult, no one believes in you like a mother, no one encourages like a mother, no one hugs like a mother and no one gives advice like a mother.
On this special day, make yourself feel unique and original by buying painting, sculpture, Print, collage, photography or drawing in an original and simple way.
A selection of works from 300 € to 1.500 €.
Also, if you want to be original and different, we have the option of the The Art Tubea totally exclusive experience where we offer totally personalised advice.
Artworks selected
ANTONI TÀPIES
JOAN MIRÓ
Joan Miró (Barcelona, Spain, 1893 - Palma de Mallorca, Spain, 1983) was a Catalan artist who drew technical and formal influences from the everyday and the natural environment. He showed his rebelliousness and a great sensitivity to the political and social events around him. This contrast of forces led him to create a unique and highly personal language that makes him one of the most influential artists of the 20th century.
NOEMÍ IGLESIAS BARRIOS
Noemí Iglesias Barrios (Asturias, Spain, 1987) is an artist who works with sculptural media and performative formats. She is also a clear example of contemporary nomadism. In her works she uses the technical tradition of floral production in porcelain, thus representing the current commodification of the current infatuation. Thus, experiences are presented through manufactured products. In 2019 she received a Master's degree in Porcelain from Tainan National University of the Arts where she studied contemporary ceramic practices thanks to the ROC Taiwan Scholarship from the Taiwanese Government.
EVA ARMISÉN
The work of Eva Armisén (Zaragoza, Spain, 1969) focuses on capturing daily life and the everyday as something extraordinary. She proposes a vital and optimistic look that takes us to a world that is habitable and full of emotion. With an increasingly international career, we can see her work in cities such as Seoul, Los Angeles, Hong Kong, Singapore, Lisbon, Taipei, Shanghai or Melbourne in art fairs and solo exhibitions.
ELLEN KOOI
The photography of Ellen Kooi (Leeuwarden, Holland, 1962) unravels a protean pulse between man and nature, between each person and their environment, a complex and conflictive relationship that today we are rethinking more than ever and that is yet to be reinvented. The planning of his images requires a laboriousness and a talent that makes the staging an exercise in virtuosity. He complements natural light with artificial lighting that reinterprets Renaissance aerial perspective with always surprising results.
JOAN HERNÁNDEZ PIJUAN
Although the early works of Joan Hernández Pijuan (Barcelona, Spain, 1931 - ibidem, 2005) were close to gestural expressionism, he soon adopted a geometric figuration dominated by fields of colour and the presence of solitary objects such as fruit, glasses, eggs and scissors. Treated with elegance and mysticism, colour was always central to his work. On a plain ground with passages of grey and green, Hernández Pijuan incorporated mathematical elements and references such as grids or metric tapes. Strips of colour, tonal gradation, transparencies, textures and resonant light are elements that typify the work of the artist, who in the 1980s incorporated elements such as the profile of a cypress tree, the furrows of a plough or the shape of a leaf, without ever abandoning abstraction. At the end of the eighties, Hernández Pijuan returned to Informalism, finally developing a style of painting characterised exclusively by the use of a black and white palette.
JAIME SICILIA
Architect by the Polytechnic University of Madrid. Beauty repairs. This is the central idea on which Jaime Sicilia (Madrid, Spain, 1970) develops his work as a visual artist and architect. As a visual artist he works in multidisciplinary projects through painting, sculpture, photography and video. As an architect he has developed his professional career at Richard Rogers Partnership (London) and in his own studio. His work has been awarded and recognised internationally, being selected to represent Spain in the Green Building Challenge (Tokyo 2005) among others. He has been a lecturer (Antonio de Nebrija University and La Salle University) and researcher (FAME Project 2011, Spanish Government).
NANON MORSINK
Dutch artist Nanon Morsink (Hengelo, Netherlands, 1964) calls herself a multidisciplinary artist as she has always worked with various materials and techniques. However, her latest works have focused on the use of textiles. Using various salvaged materials, the artist constructs three-dimensional works linked to textile art. Paintings in which the artist develops the textile concept within the painting, women's faces camouflaged among colourful fabrics and embroideries. Socks made of wool and intervened with footwear that individualise different characters from very diverse fields defined by the artist.
MARCEL GIRÓ
The work of Marcel Giró (Barcelona, Spain, 1912 - ibidem, 2001) is part of the photographic collective Foto Cine Clube Bandeirante (FCCB), a benchmark of avant-garde photography in Brazil, characterised by the constant search for new visual languages and by the creative fervour of the Brazilian post-war period. Giró's work is articulated from a precise and innovative point of view. His photographs show a recurring interest in geometric figures, chiaroscuro and extreme contrasts. With these elements, Giró composes an aesthetic of his own, a new photographic syntax, where the artist constantly tries, through his eloquent play of light and shadow, to exceed the limits of representation and meaning.
ALFONSO ALBACETE
Alfonso Albacete (Antequera, Málaga, Spain, 1950) is a Spanish painter, engraver and artist. Trained as an architect, he has been exhibiting his pictorial work since 1978. He belongs to the generation of the late seventies. A generation that abandoned previous conceptual experiences to return to painting from the perspective offered by the historical avant-garde and current abstractions. Albacete works with compositions of figures and very luminous spaces.