
Yves Ullens
(Belgium)
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The biography and prices are indicated all in bottom of the page.
De biografie en prijzen worden helemaal beneden van de bladzijde aangegeven.
La biographie et les prix sont indiqués tout en bas de la page.
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| Shinning Colours #1, Brussels 2004, 60x90cm, Ed. 3
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| The Theatre of Lights #1, Knokke 2003, 114x76cm, Ed. 5
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| Light Meshes #1 (triptych), Lille 2004, 45x30cm (x3), Ed. 5
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| Vibrating Energy #1, Lille 2004, 40x60cm, Ed. 10
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| Vibrating Energy #2, Lille 2004, 40x60cm, Ed. 10
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| The Heavenly Stairway #2, Brussels 2003, 76x114cm, Ed. 5
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| Shadow of Lights #1 (triptych), Brussels 2003, 60x90cm (x3), Ed. 5
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| Light Slidings, Brussels 2004, 150x210cm, Ed. 3
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| Light Streaks, Brussels 2004, 150x210cm, Ed. 3
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| Out in the Blue, Tobaggo Keys 1997, 100x150cm, Ed. 5
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| BB Blue #3, Bora-Bora 2004,100x150cm, Ed. 5
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| Blue Spiral of Energy, Brussels 2003, 76x114cm, Ed. 5
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| Colour Changes #1, Holiday Isle (Florida) 2003,100x150cm, Ed. 3
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| Coloured Atmosphere #5, Brussels 2004, 76x114cm, Ed. 5
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| Magic Colours #6, Venice 2002, 20x30cm, Ed. 10
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| Magic Colours #1, Venice 2002, 20x30cm, Ed. 10
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| Purple Inner Landscape, Brussels 2002,100x150cm, Ed. 5
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| Pink Sweetness, London 2005, 60x40cm, Ed. 20
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| Red Light Waves, La Hulpe 2001, 20x30cm, Ed. 10
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| Light Sculpture #1, Brussels 2003, 76x114cm, Ed. 5
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| Scenic Shimmers #2, Brussels 2004, 76x114cm, Ed. 5
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| The Colour of Sounds, Phuket 2000, 150x100cm, Ed. 5
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| Zero or Infinity, Brussels 2003, 76x114cm, Ed. 5
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| The Towers of the Future, Basel 2003, 120x180cm, Ed. 3
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| The Wings of the Future, Knokke 2003, 76x114cm, Ed. 5
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| The Towers of the Future, Basel 2003, 120x180cm, Ed. 3
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| Golden Vibrations, Barcelona 2005, 77x115cm, Ed. 5
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| Graffiti of Lights #1, Brussels 2006, 76x114cm, Ed. 5
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| The Bright Universe #2, Brussels 2006, 76x114cm, Ed. 5
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| Intense Weaving #1, Brussels 2006, 150x112cm, Ed. 5
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Light Rods #1, Brussels 2006, 60x90cm, Ed. 5
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| Light Veils #1, Geneva 2004, 150x100cm, Ed. 5
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| Imaginary Garden, Brussels 2004, 150x210cm, Ed. 3
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| Zen Attitude #1, Barcelona 2005, 100x76cm, Ed. 5
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| Zen Attitude #2, Barcelona 2005, 100x76cm, Ed. 5
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| The Bright Universe #1, Brussels 2006, 100x150xcm, Ed. 5
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INTRODUCTION
Having been a “photomateur“ for a long time, to use Gisele Freund’s expression, Yves Ullens decided at the age of 40 to transform his hobby into a way of life. He put down his first marks as a teenager, in a makeshift darkroom at his paternal grandmother’s house. She was a photographer, filmmaker, writer, archaeologist and a friend of the explorer and photographer Ella Maillart. Yves Ullens spent the equivalent of his final year of secondary school in Newport, in the United States. There he had the opportunity to study photography and above all learn how to observe. His teacher emphasized to him that a camera is not a gun. “It’s not just about shooting, but about identifying what is meaningful to us in order to be able to transmit it. Looking means observing light and framing as we move rather than zooming in ”.
At this stage, he was not yet attracted to the abstract in fact as a teenager he was afraid of it. A trip to Turkey in 1996 gave him his first artistic experience. What might have been merely a holiday snapshot (a photograph of a salt lake hastily taken through the window of a bus) proved to be pure abstraction, blurring perspectives into an unexpected formal experience. The snatched picture showed him the expressive power of colour and light in a fortunate encounter due to chance. Yves has worked to reproduce this artistic experience ever since by keeping his senses constantly alert. Moving beyond portraits and landscapes - the staples of the amateur photographer’s repertoire - he sought out other channels, transcending the emotional purpose of a fixed image, from memento mori to pure experimentation and creativity. An abstract series was realized in Venice, and he re-invented the cliché of sunset photography by taking
the picture from an aircraft. The Birth of Colours, taken in 1997 in Italy, was a revelation, imposing colour as one of his principal modes of artistic expression. A fishermen’s cottage (called ‘Casa Bepi’) in a back street of Burano, with a narrow façade of intense colour riddled with deep cracks “these imperfections which make the distinct beauty of things” he says became a living object in the evening light. A long exposure time and moving the camera by hand creates the hazy effect of a painted image and produces a subtle blend of tones. Since then, Yves Ullens has intentionally played around with the “errors” and taboos dictated by orthodox photographic practice unusual framing, blurred effects, out of focus, zoom effect to create new worlds where it is difficult to imagine the original subject.
Photographic trance
Yves Ullens dances round his subjects like a whirling Dervish possessed by a mystical rite. “Tracker of light”, the expression coined by Genevieve Bergé, has become his trademark, explaining the daily quest of someone who chases stardust as though in a trance, always ready to catch an image. At the crack of dawn, just as a ray of light peeps through a thin curtain, the hunt is on. More than light, it is colour that attracts him. This dance, which he compares to tai chi and gymnastics of the soul, creates a universe where matter, texture, shape, volume, colour and the “state of light” have their own life, freed from the purely figurative.
Christine De Naeyer, June 2006
Editions are generally of five prints + two artist proofs.
Smaller prints are generally an edition of 10.
Larger and/or exceptionnal prints are edition of 3.
Triptych are an edition of 5.
Prices (taxes excluded 21%) range from 650 euros (for 20x30 cm - 7.9x11.8 inches, edition of 10) to 8000 euros (for 150x210 cm -- 59.1x82.7 inches, Edition of 3).
Every picture comes with a certificate.
All frames are made out of plain ramin wood. The picture is mounted on plain aluminium and protected with a high quality anti-UV sleeve.
Then, the whole (alu + picture + anti-UV sleeve) is placed into an american box.
I have selected only the very best quality of c-print papers:
Fuji Crystal Archive paper for the smaller prints (up to 80x120cm) and lambda prints printed on Kodak Endura paper for the larger prints.
The anti-UV sleeves used increase further the already exceptionnal guaranteed stability of those photo papers.
Please contact the gallery for current pricing and availability > CLICK HERE
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