Age, Biography and Wiki
Stephane Graff was born on 1965 in United Kingdom, is a Stéphane Graff is Franco British, self taught artist. Discover Stephane Graff's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 59 years old?
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He is a member of famous artist with the age 59 years old group.
Stephane Graff Height, Weight & Measurements
At 59 years old, Stephane Graff height not available right now. We will update Stephane Graff's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.
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Dating & Relationship status
He is currently single. He is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about He's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, He has no children.
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Stephane Graff Net Worth
His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Stephane Graff worth at the age of 59 years old? Stephane Graff’s income source is mostly from being a successful artist. He is from United Kingdom. We have estimated Stephane Graff's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.
Net Worth in 2024 |
$1 Million - $5 Million |
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Under Review |
Net Worth in 2023 |
Pending |
Salary in 2023 |
Under Review |
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Stephane Graff Social Network
Timeline
Stéphane Graff (born 1965) is a Franco-British, self-taught artist, based in London.
His practice focuses on photography and photo-realistic paintings.
Having been influenced by the psychoanalytical traditions of Freud and Jung, and scientific methods, Graff, regularly addresses in his work themes of identity, concealment, memory and a secular conception of the sacred.
In-depth research led Graff to develop Alter Egos such as the scientist ‘Professore’ and the ethno-botanist Dr Albert Frique.
His most extensive bodies of work are the ‘Black Box’ paintings, the ‘Constrictions’ photographic series, and the ‘Mille-Feuille’ paintings, which are made on numerous strips of wood, combining the disciplines of painting and sculpture.
Graff has exhibited internationally.
In the late 1980s, Graff utilised techniques combining painting, photography and photomontage.
In a 1988 solo exhibition there were three categories of work: "Theological Studies", "Feminine Beauty", and "Screaming Portraits".
Among the religious works was ‘The Last Supper’.
In this photomontage, the heads of the disciples are concealed by black triangles, except for Judas, who is concealed by a black square.
In ‘The Canonisation of Mary Magdalene’, the subject is veiled in black and depicted mourning Christ's crucifixion.
According to De Dreyer, "By sculpting the halo in black, the artist narrates the transition from prostitute to saint."
In works exploring the theme of feminine beauty, Graff juxtaposed “traditional” and “radical” conceptions of the theme.
His earlier treatment of the female nude, such ‘Twisted Nude’ (1988) was interpreted as referencing renaissance sculpture, and having “an inhuman, stone-like quality”.
The "Screaming Portraits" series is characterised by tense, muscular detail and contorted expressions “suggestive of mental illness” It includes ‘Agree to Disagree’, ‘Portrait of the Old Man’ and ‘Exorcism’.
Much of Graff's early work was inspired by ancient and tribal art; he was often concerned with memory and man's relationship to the past.
From 1988, Graff carried out research on Ancient Egyptian artefacts, travelling to Cairo and Luxor.
He also studied at the British Museum’s department of Egyptian Antiquities, where he was able to examine a large collection of Ancient Egyptian mummies and funeral relics
In February 1991, Graff exhibited the series ‘Earthworks’ at Crane Kalman Gallery, London.
Works were made from earth, sand and oil paint, combined and applied to a wooden surface.
Graff utilised a restricted palette of greys and earth tones, with the thick layers of "indigenous media" which he intended to be evocative of cave walls.
The artist used the cave as a psychological metaphor, stating "I find that the creative process is like an excavation. The artist progressively digs deeper to unearth the fossils of the unconscious".
In 1991 Graff began producing a series of photographic nudes, entitled ‘Constrictions’
Works were informed by similar concerns to his 1992 photographic exhibition ‘Constrictions’ at Hamiltons Gallery, London, which included images of string bound meat and sculptural female forms bound with coarse rope.
David Cohen reviewed the exhibition in ‘Contemporary Art’:
"His new sculptural works explore similar borderline territory between the animate and the static, the sensual and the morbid."
Some sculptures interpreted the theme of mummification by incorporating personal objects, wrapped and preserved in numerous burnt linen packages and embedded in earth panels, which the artist viewed as resembling tribal burial grounds or rows of Egyptian Shabti figures.
“The work relates to both what we can and what we cannot see before us; or more succinctly, it illustrates the theme of memory and repression.” (Graff)
Graff exhibited his ‘Mummification’ series at the New Burlington Gallery, London in 1994, sponsored by the Emerging Art Foundation.
The exhibition also included a body of work titled ‘Sand Reliefs’.
Graff exhibited later works from the ‘Earthworks’ series at Fabien Fryns, Gallery, Spain, in 1997, alongside works from the ‘Mummification’ series.
These ‘Earthworks’ were executed in similar organic, mixed media.
‘Traces de Terre’, ‘Akhenaten’s Dream’ and ‘Moonblood Dance’, referenced Paleolithic painting.
, and later revisited the series in 2013.
The images present both male and female bodies as sites for constriction or concealment.
They are usually bound with rope.
"Following the Surrealists’ devotion to ethnography"(Pieroni), Graff was interested in forms of constriction evident in tribal or cultural practices, such as the neck extending rings of the Padaung people of South East Asia, and Chinese foot binding.
Selected exhibitions include: Galleria Mucciaccia, Rome (2018); Almine Rech Gallery, in London (2016); The Musée d’Art Modern et Contemporain in Nice, France (2013); the Ercel Foundation in Turin, Italy (2010); the Operating Room, Amerikan Hastanesi, Istanbul (2010); the Musee de Marrakech, Morocco (2004); and the Museum of Mankind in London (1991).