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Hans Zimmer — Untitled
Hans Zimmer

Untitled

This vigorous oil on canvas presents a fragmented, masklike face rendered in a blazing field of yellow and orange, set against a turbulent ground of cerulean blue, black, and deep red. The figure occupies nearly the full picture plane, its features dissolved into sweeping, impastoed gestures that suggest eyes, nose, and mouth without committing to legible anatomy. Thick ridges of paint catch the light across the surface, testifying to the physical urgency of the artist's process. The black contour lines, drawn with a loaded brush, both define and destabilize the form, pulling the composition simultaneously toward figuration and pure abstraction. A red circle floats at the upper left, functioning less as a representational element than as a chromatic counterweight to the dominant yellows, while streaks of bright blue drip downward through the mid-ground, animating the lower half of the canvas with a sense of raw, unresolved energy. The work belongs to a tradition of European gestural painting that gained momentum in the postwar decades, indebted to the expressive distortions of the CoBrA movement and to earlier precedents in German Expressionism. The face as subject carries a long iconographic weight in that lineage, serving as a site where psychological intensity, mythological resonance, and painterly experiment converge. Here the head becomes a vessel for states that resist verbal description, its asymmetry and chromatic agitation communicating something closer to emotional pressure than to portraiture. The scale, intimate at 50 by 41.5 centimeters, invites close looking, and the density of the paint surface rewards sustained attention with new textural incident at each proximity. For collectors, this work represents an accessible entry into a body of practice defined by formal boldness and material conviction. The small format belies the ambition of the image, and the condition of the canvas appears stable, with the impasto intact and the colors retaining their original saturation. The illegible signature in the lower left corner, rendered in the same gestural hand as the painting itself, reinforces the sense that authorship and image are inseparable here, both produced in the same continuous act of making. Works of this character, energetic, emotionally immediate, and rooted in a serious engagement with the history of modern painting, represent enduring value in a private collection.

Medium
Oil on canvas

🔨 Auction Lot

Martini Studio d'Arte: Modern And Contemporary Art

June 10, 2026

Estimate: €5,000 to €7,000

Lot 94

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About this work

Hans Zimmer, Untitled

This vigorous oil on canvas presents a fragmented, masklike face rendered in a blazing field of yellow and orange, set against a turbulent ground of cerulean blue, black, and deep red. The figure occupies nearly the full picture plane, its features dissolved into sweeping, impastoed gestures that suggest eyes, nose, and mouth without committing to legible anatomy. Thick ridges of paint catch the light across the surface, testifying to the physical urgency of the artist's process. The black contour lines, drawn with a loaded brush, both define and destabilize the form, pulling the composition simultaneously toward figuration and pure abstraction. A red circle floats at the upper left, functioning less as a representational element than as a chromatic counterweight to the dominant yellows, while streaks of bright blue drip downward through the mid-ground, animating the lower half of the canvas with a sense of raw, unresolved energy. The work belongs to a tradition of European gestural painting that gained momentum in the postwar decades, indebted to the expressive distortions of the CoBrA movement and to earlier precedents in German Expressionism. The face as subject carries a long iconographic weight in that lineage, serving as a site where psychological intensity, mythological resonance, and painterly experiment converge. Here the head becomes a vessel for states that resist verbal description, its asymmetry and chromatic agitation communicating something closer to emotional pressure than to portraiture. The scale, intimate at 50 by 41.5 centimeters, invites close looking, and the density of the paint surface rewards sustained attention with new textural incident at each proximity. For collectors, this work represents an accessible entry into a body of practice defined by formal boldness and material conviction. The small format belies the ambition of the image, and the condition of the canvas appears stable, with the impasto intact and the colors retaining their original saturation. The illegible signature in the lower left corner, rendered in the same gestural hand as the painting itself, reinforces the sense that authorship and image are inseparable here, both produced in the same continuous act of making. Works of this character, energetic, emotionally immediate, and rooted in a serious engagement with the history of modern painting, represent enduring value in a private collection.

Medium
Oil on canvas
Seen at
Martini Studio d'Arte

Related themes

CoBrA Movement, German Artist, Figurative Painting, European Artist, Emotional Intensity, Male Artist, Face And Mask, Oil On Canvas, Gestural Abstraction, Cerulean Blue, Psychological Themes, Postwar Art, Modern European, Yellow And Orange, Portrait, Expressionist, Mythological Themes, Abstract Figurative, Impasto, Large Scale, Raw Energy