The artwork "Is there room for Bruce? 2016, FRAMED" by Jamian Juliano-Villani depicts a surreal kitchen with a stack of bread on a geometric patterned cloth. A scarecrow figure in green with outstretched arms appears through the window, while apples sit above the refrigerator on the left and cabinet on the right. The artwork comes in a dark brown frame.

Jamian Juliano–Villani

Is there room for Bruce? 2016, FRAMED

£480

A limited edition digital pigment print with embossing by Jamian Juliano-Villani, exclusive to House of Voltaire.

We are pleased to offer free delivery within London.

If you are based outside of London, please contact us for further information about National and International shipping options.

Edition Size

50

Dimensions

62.5 x 47.5 cm framed

Finishing

Digital pigment print with embossing. This edition is framed using high quality, museum grade materials. The work may have previously been used for display purposes.

Last framed edition available

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    Courtesy of the artist and Tanya Leighton Gallery, Berlin

    About The Artwork

    A limited edition embossed print. Composed using an atlas of thousands of appropriated images, paintings, repaintings and long-form collage, Juliano-Villani's works are painted, repainted, and edited directly on the canvas; ‘a poor man’s Photoshop,’ or an almost masochistically longhand form of collage that is at odds with the speed at which we consume images today. The resulting works are anxiety filled images that are simultaneously prosaic and surreal. We are pleased to offer free delivery within London. If you are based outside of London, please contact us for further information about National and International shipping options.

    About Jamian Juliano–Villani

    Jamian Juliano-Villani (b. 1987) is a contemporary American painter known for her mass-media-informed paintings. The artist wryly refers to her compositions as ‘arranged marriages’ in which imagery is painted, repainted, and edited directly on the canvas, a longhand form of collage that is at odds with the speed at which we consume images today. The resulting works are anxiety filled images that are simultaneously prosaic and surreal.

    Juliano-Villani (b. 1987, New Jersey, USA) lives and works in Brooklyn. Recent solo exhibitions include Try Explaining How You Feel, Kunsthall Stavanger, Norway; Let's Kill Nicole, Massimo De Carlo, London, UK; Ten Pound Hand, JTT, New York, NY; Hydra Workshop, Hydra, Greece; Sincerely, Tony, Massimo De Carlo, Italy; The World’s Greatest Planet on Earth, Studio Voltaire, London; Me, Myself and Jah, Rawson Projects, Brooklyn. Group exhibitions include, A Shape That Stands Up, Hammer Museum (Off-Site), Los Angeles; FADE IN: INT. ART GALLERY – DAY, Swiss Institute, New York, NY; A Shape That Stands Up, Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; Flatlands, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Unorthodox, Jewish Museum, New York; and Greater New York, MoMA PS1, New York.

    Juliano-Villlani is represented by MASSIMODECARLO.