The Collective
An assembly of minds that redifined the visual landscape. Presenting the definitive voices of modern heritage.
Jean-Michel Basquiat
A defining force of Neo-Expressionism, Basquiat fused street iconography with art-historical consciousness. His visual language bridges raw urban energy and intellectual symbolism, reshaping the trajectory of late-20th-century contemporary art.
(1960 - 1988)
Keith Haring
Haring transformed public space into a universal visual dialogue. Through rhythmic lines and symbolic figures, his work dissolves the boundary between street culture and institutional art, creating an enduring global iconography.
(1958 - 1990)
(1923 - 1997)
Roy Lichtenstein
A pioneer of Pop Art, Lichtenstein redefined modern image-making through comic-book aesthetics and mechanical precision. His works question originality, perception, and the language of mass culture within fine art.
(1928 - 1987)
Andy Warhol
Warhol transformed the language of modern image culture through seriality and detachment. His silkscreens collapse the distance between icon and production, where repetition becomes a quiet meditation on image, memory, and permanence.
Mark Rothko
A central figure of Abstract Expressionism, Rothko transformed color into an emotional architecture. His luminous fields invite silent contemplation, dissolving form into atmosphere and redefining the spiritual potential of modern painting.
(1903 - 1970)
Piet Mondrian
Mondrian distilled painting to its essential structure—line, color, and equilibrium. His disciplined compositions transcend representation, proposing a universal order where geometry becomes a meditative language of balance and clarity.
(1878 - 1944)
(1881 - 1973)
Pablo Picasso
One of the most transformative figures of modern art, Picasso continuously reinvented visual language—from Cubism to late expressive works—challenging perception and expanding the boundaries of artistic authorship.
(1909 - 1992)
Francis Bacon
Bacon’s visceral imagery confronts the fragility of the human condition. Through distorted figures and charged spatial tension, his paintings capture existential intensity and redefine post-war figurative expression.
Alexander Calder
A pioneer of kinetic sculpture, Calder introduced movement as a poetic language within modern art. His mobiles and stabiles redefine balance, gravity, and space, merging engineering precision with lyrical abstraction.
(1898 - 1976)
Yves Klein
Klein pursued the immaterial through radical monochrome expression. His iconic International Klein Blue and performative gestures transformed color into a metaphysical experience, reshaping the dialogue between presence and void.
(1928 - 1962)
(1907 - 1999)
Leo Castelli
Art dealer and pioneer of contemporary galleries. Championing iconic artists like Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein, Jasper Johns, Cy Twombly, Frank Stella, Donald Judd and many more.
(1953 - 1989)
Rupert Jasen Smith
Renowned as the master printer behind seminal screenprints of the 1980s, Smith played a pivotal role in translating artistic vision into precise editions. His collaborations shaped the legacy of artists such as Warhol and Basquiat within the language of printmaking.

