1915
50.0 x 74.0 cmGiclée- of canvasafdruk van museumkwaliteit met een snelle productie en flexibele afwerkingsmogelijkheden. ( Bestel een handgeschilderde reproductie van dit verzamelobject
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Kies uit onze vooraf ingestelde maten die overeenkomen met de originele verhoudingen van het kunstwerk.
U kunt uw eigen afmetingen opgeven om in een specifieke lijst of ruimte te passen. Als de door u gekozen maat niet overeenkomt met de proporties van het originele kunstwerk, zullen wij de afbeelding bijsnijden of uitbreiden met een gespiegelde of effen rand. Een digitaal mockup wordt ter goedkeuring naar u verzonden voordat de productie begint.
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Alfred Jensen was a man whose life unfolded like a complex, multi-layered map, traversing continents and cultures before settling into the profound, structured enigmas of his canvas. Born in Guatemala City in 1903 to a Danish father and a German-Polish mother, his early years were marked by a poignant displacement. The tragic loss of his mother when he was just seven years old sent him to live with relatives in Denmark, an experience that instilled in him a lifelong appreciation for the deep traditions of Europe. This nomadic spirit—a blend of Latin American roots and Northern European discipline—would later become the bedrock of his artistic identity, allowing him to weave together disparate threads of human knowledge into a singular, cohesive visual language.
Before he ever picked up a brush with the intent to revolutionize abstraction, Jensen’s life was defined by movement and manual labor. He worked as a ship's cabin boy, a traveler through the vastness of the sea, and even spent time as a cowboy and chicken farmer in the Americas. These formative, rugged years provided him with an observational sharpness and a fascination with the rhythms of the natural world. It was not until his pursuit of formal art education—studying under the legendary Hans Hofmann in Munich and later exploring the vibrant studios of Paris—that these wandering observations began to crystallize into a rigorous, systematic approach to painting.
To look upon a Jensen painting is to enter a labyrinth of logic and light. He was far more than a mere painter; he was a cartographer of meaning, utilizing mathematical systems, color theories, and numerical grids to construct his two-dimensional worlds. His work represents a masterful bridge between the analytical and the mystical. While his technique relied heavily on the precision of geometric forms and the scientific application of Goethe’s color theory, the soul of his work remained deeply rooted in the esoteric. He drew profound inspiration from the Mayan calendar, the I Ching, and various systems of divination, seeking to find a universal pattern that connected the cosmic with the terrestrial.
This unique methodology allowed him to transcend the boundaries of traditional Abstract Expressionism. While his contemporary, Hans Hofmann, emphasized the emotional power of gestural paint, Jensen moved toward what is often termed concrete abstract art. His canvases became dense, polychromatic grids where every square and line served a purpose within a larger, interconnected system. Through these overlapping layers of signs, numbers, and colors, he created a visual shorthand for the complexities of existence, making the invisible structures of thought and time visible to the eye.
The trajectory of Jensen’s career was significantly shaped by his relationship with the influential art collector Saidie Adler May. As his patron and companion, May accompanied him on extensive travels through Europe, exposing him to the masterpieces of Paul Klee and Wassily Kandinsky. This exposure further enriched his palette and deepened his commitment to a structured, symbolic form of abstraction. His ability to synthesize these high-modernist influences with his own interest in pre-Columbian and Asian aesthetics positioned him as a precursor to much of the Conceptual art that would follow.
Though he lived a life of profound intellectual solitude, his impact on the art world was monumental. His work is now celebrated in the most prestigious institutions across the globe, including:
Alfred Jensen remains a singular figure in the history of 20th-century art—an artist who did not merely paint what he saw, but rather attempted to paint the very logic upon which the universe is built. His legacy persists in every vibrant, gridded composition that dares to find the sacred within the mathematical.
1903 - 1981 , Guatemala
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