Like this site?
May 26, 2012
Check Out 0 items
Order StatusOrder Status
 
Browse
(See All Items)
 
La Ciambella Porcelain Art Ashtray by Paul Giovanopoulos
View Larger Image

La Ciambella Porcelain Art Ashtray by Paul Giovanopoulos

Price: $36.00
Browse previous itemThis item is currently out of stockBrowse next item
Calculate Shipping Cost

La Ciambella porcelain art ashtray by Paul Giovanopoulos for Ritzenhoff

The La Ciambella line of porcelain ashtrays feature artwork by artists from all over the world. The artist's name is printed discreetly on each ashtray.

The ashtray, the smaller of the two sizes offered by Ritzenhoff

  • Quality porcelain dual rest ashtray
  • Measures 5.5" square and 1" tall
  • Weighs 10 oz
  • Base is covered to protect the ashtray and your furniture
  • Packaged in a gift box with product brochure 

Marked 'Paul Giovanopoulos Ritzenhoff' in lower right corner of the well. New and in stock!

 Click on images to enlarge, use your back arrow to return to this page.

cigar-art-porcelain-ashtray by Ritzenhoff Ritzenhoff-cigar-art-ashtray paul-felt-bottom 2

 Paul Giovanopoulos
  Paul Giovanopoulos
 
Born 1939 in Kastoria/Greece. Works as Artist in New York, USA.
 
“The luxury of having many solutions to a single problem.” This is the obvious motif in the art of Paul Giovanopoulos: four cow silhouettes, stamped next to each other and individualized with different patterns adorn his milk glass. His design toys with the idea of a serial picture, quotes the ornament on the ornament along with Giovanopoulos’ other works – the cow motif was already referred to in his 1986 “Now Cow” series in various interpretations, which in turn could be regarded as a homage to Andy Warhol’s half-profile of a cow; the leaders of an endless herd of cattle in the history of art. Giovanopoulos does not only multiply cows, he also multiplies all kinds of other objects, such as paint tubes, ice-cream wafers or hamburgers: not as much as the “what” but the “how” is what draws his attention. Using an everyday object, Giovanopoulos declines many different methods of depiction on a canvas – sometimes cubist, sometimes impressionistic, à la Roy Lichtenstein or Keith Haring, based freely on Dalí, Botero or Jasper Johns. The painter Giovanopoulos thus becomes the curator of his own art collection and opens a new museum with each new canvas – dedicated, for example, to baseball in 45 pictures. In spite of the endless rows of motifs, Giovanopoulos never gets bored. On the contrary: the spontaneity and the fun of creating art in this way, he says writing of his milk design, are the best tribute to the freshness of milk. The main thing is that the use-by date is not exceeded.


Fast inexpensive shipping at Big Ashtray all major credit cards accepted

Home  About Us  Shop Online  Contact Us  Smokin' Links  Ashtray Lore

   Powered By  

Content Privately Owned - All Rights Reserved  2006 - 2012


Share on Tumblr