Menu
Consultoria de arte gratuita
Visualizar na paredeVisualizar na parede Visualizar em RAVisualizar em RA Encomendar reprodução pintada à mão Encomendar reprodução pintada à mãoAlternar para Imagem Alternar para Imagem CompartilharCompartilhar
DetalhesDetalhes Adicionar aos favoritos Adicionar aos favoritos Baixar imagemBaixar imagem SemelhantesSemelhantes Raio XRaio X Apresentação de slidesApresentação de slides

Max Jacob

Discover Christopher Wood’s portrait of Max Jacob – a contemplative oil painting showcasing muted blues & expressive lines. Explore this unique blend of realism & impressionism.

Explore the surreal world of Christopher Wood – a British painter known for his dreamlike landscapes, evocative figures, & unique blend of influences. Discover his art.

Giclê / Impressão de Arte

Impressão giclée ou em tela de qualidade de museu, com produção rápida e opções flexíveis de acabamento. (Encomendar reprodução pintada à mão Encomendar reprodução pintada à mãoAlternar para Imagem Alternar para Imagem)

Standard
custom
CM
INCH

Escolha entre os nossos tamanhos pré-definidos que respeitam as proporções originais da obra de arte.

largura
altura

Você pode inserir suas próprias dimensões para se ajustar a uma moldura ou espaço específico. Se o tamanho selecionado não corresponder às proporções da imagem original, iremos recortar a obra de arte ou estender a imagem com uma borda espelhada ou preenchimento sólido. Um mockup digital será enviado para sua aprovação antes do início da produção.
Por favor, observe que a visualização na tela não reflete o recorte ou a extensão real. Apenas o mockup mostrará com precisão a composição final.
Embora tamanhos personalizados estejam disponíveis, recomendamos selecionar uma dimensão da lista predefinida para preservar as proporções originais.

Entrega mundial () em 2 semanas, em vez das 4/5 semanas padrão. (1 Agosto)

why_choose_icon
Envio Expresso Gratuito para todo o Mundo
why_choose_icon
Tela de Linho de Alta Qualidade
why_choose_icon
Seguro de transporte completo
why_choose_icon
Garantia de Reembolso de Impostos Alfandegários
why_choose_icon
Garantia de Fidelidade Cromática
why_choose_icon
Política de Devolução de 60 Dias (Apenas para Defeitos)
why_choose_icon
Garantia de reembolso de 100%
why_choose_icon
Oferta de desconto por quantidade

Preço Total

$ 62

reproduction

Max Jacob

Giclê / Impressão de Arte

Tamanho da Reprodução

-

Preço Total

$ 62


Biografia do Artista

A Surrealist Vision of England: The Enigmatic Life of Christopher Wood

Christopher Wood remains one of the most enigmatic and haunting figures of British Modernism, a painter whose brief but brilliant career left an indelible mark on the twentieth-century avant-garde. Born in 1901 in Knowsley, Lancashire, Wood possessed a singular artistic sensibility that defied the rigid categorizations of his era. His work is characterized by a profound, dreamlike quality, where the familiar landscapes of England and France are transformed into symbolic realms of unsettling beauty and deep melancholy. To look upon a Wood painting is to enter a psychological landscape, one where the boundaries between reality and the subconscious are perpetually blurred.

The foundations of his unique aesthetic were laid in his youth, deeply influenced by a childhood fascination with botany and folklore. Nurtured by his father, a botanist, Wood developed an acute eye for the intricate details of the natural world. This scientific precision, however, was never merely observational; it was always filtered through a lens of poetic distortion. His early appreciation for the organic structures of plants and the mysteries of local legends would later manifest in landscapes that feel both meticulously rendered and strangely otherworldly, as if the earth itself were breathing with a hidden, sentient life.

Parisian Echoes and the Surrealist Spirit

The trajectory of Wood’s career shifted dramatically when he moved to Paris in 1928, a period that would become the crucible of his mature style. Immersed in the vibrant, experimental atmosphere of the French capital, he found himself at the heart of the burgeoning Surrealist movement. Interacting with luminaries such as André Breton and Giorgio Morandi, Wood began to experiment with the concept of automatism—the practice of allowing chance and spontaneous gesture to guide the brush, bypassing the constraints of conscious thought. This period saw his work evolve from traditional representation toward a more complex, symbolic language.

His time in Paris allowed him to synthesize disparate influences into a cohesive, albeit fractured, vision. He mastered the ability to blend the soft, atmospheric textures of Impressionism with the jarring, unexpected juxtapositions central to Surrealism. This tension is perhaps most famously captured in his monumental oil painting, ‘Tiger and Arc de Triomphe.’ In this ambitious work, the ferocious, primal energy of a tiger is set against the structured grandeur of Parisian architecture, creating a powerful dialogue between the wildness of nature and the artifice of civilization. It remains a testament to his ability to capture both the dynamism of movement and a profound sense of stillness.

Legacy and the Geometry of Solitude

As his career progressed toward its tragic conclusion in 1930, Wood’s work began to exhibit a fascinating shift toward geometric abstraction. His later sketches, such as the ‘Westmorland Landscape’ from 1929, reveal a move toward simplified forms and a more calculated use of perspective. In these works, the lushness of his earlier style gives way to a sense of serene detachment and structural clarity. Yet, even within this newfound abstraction, an underlying tension remains palpable—a hallmark of his artistic vision that suggests a world held in a delicate, precarious balance.

The historical significance of Christopher Wood lies in his ability to bridge the gap between the English pastoral tradition and the radical experimentation of Continental Europe. He did not merely adopt Surrealism; he translated it into a uniquely British idiom, infusing it with a sense of nostalgia and botanical wonder. Though his life was cut short, his legacy persists through works that continue to haunt and inspire, serving as a poignant reminder of the power of the individual imagination to reshape the world through the lens of dreams.

Christopher Wood

Christopher Wood

1901 - 1930 , United Kingdom

Dados Rápidos

  • Artistic Movement Or Style: Surrealism & Impressionism
  • Artists Or Movements Influenced By This Artist: ['Early 20th Century']
  • Artists Who Influenced This Artist: ['Eric Gill']
  • Date Of Birth: Knowsley, United Kingdom (1901)
  • Date Of Death: 1930
  • Full Name: John Christopher Wood
  • Nationality: British
  • Notable Artworks:
    • Tiger and Arc de Triomphe
    • Westmorland Landscape
    • Brown Jug
  • Place Of Birth: United Kingdom