Seestucke (Sea View), 2021 is a hybrid raster dissolved offset digital print by Gerhard Richter. From a limited editon of 500 this artwork is signed and numbered by the artist and comes with a Certificate of Authenticity.
Need Help?
Artwork Details
Hybrid raster dissolved offset / digital high quality art print on Rives 260 gsm paper
Size: Signed and numbered by the artist
Shipping & Returns
This artwork ships from an archive seller in The UK
Our archive is sourced from our community of vetted galleries and collectors to offer buyers ultra-rare artworks no longer available on the open market.
Orders can be returned within 14 days of receipt by emailing hello@artrepublic.com. For exclusions and details read our full returns policy.
Please note that your order may be subject to import duties and fees upon delivery, depending on your shipping destination.
Price match
30 day returns
Courier shipping
Featured In:
Throughout his career, Gerhard Richter has navigated between realism and abstraction, exploring the material implications of various mediums without restraint. The artist has said of his practice: “I blur to make everything equal, everything equally important and equally unimportant.” Richter actively distorts his artworks by dragging paint across the surface, obscuring the marks he made previously.
Throughout his career, Gerhard Richter has navigated between realism and abstraction, exploring the material implications of various mediums without restraint. The artist has said of his practice: “I blur to make everything equal, everything equally important and equally unimportant.” Richter actively distorts his artworks by dragging paint across the surface, obscuring the marks he made previously.
This multi-step process of creating an artwork and then immediately covering it with more layers is the perfect example of painterly distortion. We love this focus on the process of creation and how Richter uses distortion to add an air of mystery to his artworks.
We love Gerhard Richter's intense focus on the process of creation and how the artist uses extreme distortion and paint dragging to add an air of mystery and intrigue to his artworks.