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Medium :
Pencil, India Ink on Paper , Wood under glass
Framing :
Framed
Dimensions :
8.3x11in
About this artwork
My work is a visual encounter between the cosmos and the human perspective, a drawing that intertwines the futuristic and the metaphysical. Using pencil, Indian ink, and colored pencils, I have captured the essence of cosmic wonder. On the night of 13/14 March 1986, ESA's Giotto spacecraft flew within 596 km of Halley's Comet and revealed for the first time what a comet's nucleus looked like at close range. Giotto, named after the Italian painter… who depicted the Star of Bethlehem as a planet in 1303, captured the closest images of a comet ever taken. After Vega-1 and Vega-2 approached to 8,900 km and 8,000 km respectively in early March 1986, ESA used its data to guide Giotto even closer.
« I wanted to be a pilot, but I ended up painting. Now I fly higher. »
Arturo Prins is an exciting Spanish artist whose style comes from a sensibility of play, discipline, freedom and rebellion, redoubled in a constant reinvention of himself. Thematically, Prins looks to delve into metaphysics, symbolism, esoteric cosmogony, while mixing in humor to soften the transcendent themes in his work. He also describes his work as being "nostalgic for the future, sometimes with a nod to the eclectic spiritualism between East and West."