Lot details

Pino Giuseppe Dangelico után - Czinege Zsolt ( 1967 - 2021 )

#56

Eternal Sibling Embrace

Inventory no.801
Eternal Sibling Embrace
Lot 56
Pino Giuseppe Dangelico után - Czinege Zsolt ( 1967 - 2021 )5 images

Curators

Ács Érmes Károly

Ács Érmes Károly

curator

ermesprojekt@gmail.com

Ohnhaus Éva

Ohnhaus Éva

curator

eva.artdeco@gmail.com

Detailed description

In the vertical composition, three children stand close to each other in an intimate, quiet scene. On the left, a little boy is seen in profile, wearing a blue striped shirt and dark suspenders; in the center, there is a taller girl in a pale pink hat and a cream-colored dress tied with a belt; on the right, a girl in a purplish dress, barefoot. The light softly illuminates from the left, casting warm reflections on the shapes. The faces are modeled more delicately, while the clothes and background dominate with broad, 'buttery' brushwork and dissolved, patch-like layers of color. The background is a neutral, misty, bluish-green-gray mass that highlights the dominance of the rosy-purple palette. The heads of the three figures form a triangular composition, directing attention downward and towards each other. The clothing suggests a romantic nostalgia reminiscent of the 1910s-30s. Oil on canvas; the style follows Pino (Giuseppe Dangelico)'s lyrical realism, post-impressionistic figurative direction, likely from the 1990s-2010s.

Key details:

  • Triangular arrangement with three figures.

  • Soft, pastel pink-purple and cream tones.

  • Loose, plastic brushwork on the clothing and background.

  • Scattered lighting coming from the left, soft edges.

  • In the lower right corner, the signature 'Czinege'; modern canvas, stretched with staples.

Named creator: 'Czinege after Pino Giuseppe Dangelico'. The work is by a contemporary painter prominent in the Hungarian market, creating decorative genre paintings and paraphrases of well-known themes; biographical details are known to be limited. The composition and palette evoke the lyrical, romantic figurative style of Pino (Giuseppe Dangelico, 1939–2010), who became widely popular with depictions of female figures and children's portraits; studio copies and follower pieces are common following his works.