L’idée simple d’associer la porcelaine aux univers créatifs, des graphistes, illustrateurs, designers toys et artistes, permet de donner une autre approche de la figurine de décoration, qu’elle soit produite en série limitée ou en pièce unique.
La société K.Olin Tribu est basée à Limoges (France) mais son rayonnement est mondial avec la signature d’artistes reconnus, venant du Street Art & de l'art contemporain parmi lesquels : Frank Kozik, Ron English, Nathan Jurevicius, Yoskay Yamamoto, Richard Orlinski ...
Les figurines éditées par K.Olin Tribu sont produites et décorées à Limoges et bénéficient donc de l’appellation : Porcelaine de Limoges, France.
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Paul Gauguin Skateboard Triptyc
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Musart Boutique is proud to present our exclusive original collection Musart on Decks featuring limited edition skateboard decks, displaying art historical timeless masterpieces which bridge the traditional history of art and contemporary skateboarding culture at accessible prices. Part of Musart Boutique’s original collection Musart on Decks comes this exclusive limited edition of 100 Paul Gauguin Skateboard Deck Triptych featuring his notorious work When Will You Marry? Nafea Faa Ipoipo (1892). Sold at Sotheby’s auction house in 2015 for around $300 million USD to a Qatari buyer, Gauguin’s work made a record as one of the most expensive paintings sold. Painted during the time Gauguin was living in Tahiti, the artwork represents the two native Tahitian women as the central figures of the artwork. The two Tahitian women are situated within a terrestrial idyllic paradise, devoid of any sight of European civilization. The young woman dressed in traditional Tahitian garments, wears a flower to signal that she is available for marriage. The traditional bright Tahitian garments of the young woman in the foreground contrast the motherly woman sitting behind her in traditional Western clothing, thus alluding to the influence of French Colonization in the lives of the Tahitian natives. The naïve style of the outlines and vibrancy of Gauguin’s color application evidence his ideas of Synthetism and primitive art, where color, the subject, and other elements are means through which the invisible, the idea primes above all else. Although Gauguin was disappointed to find that French colonization destroyed his fantasy of living in an entirely non-industrialized society, he still allowed himself to reimagine the idyllic, native Tahitian paradise dwelling in his dreams.