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  1. Wolf Vostell. Leverkusen 1932 - Berlin 1998 After an apprenticeship as photolithographer Wolf Vostell studied at the Wuppertal "Werkkunstschule" from 1954 to 1955. He traveled extensively and in 1954 Paris developed the concept of "décollage" made from torn billboards, which subsequently also determined his later oeuvre.

  2. Wolf Vostell was born in Leverkusen, Germany, in 1932. A refugee with his family, in 1939 he escaped to Czechoslovakia, where he lived until 1945. At the war’s end, thirteen-year-old Vostell travelled with his sister and Sephardic mother to Cologne on foot, a three-month trip that presented him with the utter devastation of his country.

  3. www.artnet.com › artists › wolf-vostellWolf Vostell | Artnet

    View Wolf Vostell’s 1,045 artworks on artnet. Find an in-depth biography, exhibitions, original artworks for sale, the latest news, and sold auction prices. See available prints and multiples, paintings, and works on paper for sale and learn about the artist.

  4. TV-Dé-coll/age, no. 1. 1958-59. Coming of age in Germany in the wake of World War II, Vostell was haunted by the widespread wreckage he had witnessed. In 1954 he proposed a new form of artmaking premised on creation through destruction: unlike the process of collage, in which an image is built up from existing images, the technique he called ...

  5. proyectoidis.org › wolf-vostellWolf Vostell | IDIS

    Wolf Vostell. Wolf Vostell (Alemania 1932-1998) fue un artista alemán de los más representativos de la segunda mitad del siglo XX, que trabajó con varios medios y técnicas como la pintura la escultura, la instalación, el decollage, el video arte, el happening, y Fluxus. Nacido en ciudad alemana de Leverkusen, en la región de Renania en el ...

  6. 9 de oct. de 2019 · Vostell's large-scale happening '9 Nein Décollagen' ('9 No – Dé-coll/ages) took place on 14 September 1963 in nine different locations in Wuppertal, and was ...

  7. 20 de ene. de 2024 · See how Wolf Vostell created art, as well as an expansive aesthetic philosophy, that challenged human complacency toward war, genocide, and other catastrophic world events. “Art shall remind us that we must remember.” —Wolf Vostell A witness to the brutality of World War II and its aftermath in Germany, Wolf Vostell (1932–1998) committed his artistic practice to remembering the ...