

MP King
2026
MP King is a striking mixed media work by German artist Jochen Mühlenbrink, executed on mirror glass using acrylics, varnish, and resin. The composition presents a stylized crowned face rendered in gestural, graffiti inspired strokes, with dripping black paint cascading downward against the reflective surface. Mühlenbrink employs trompe l'oeil techniques to blur the boundary between illusion and material reality, exploiting the mirror substrate to implicate the viewer within the image. The work draws on street art traditions and contemporary painting to create a layered, perceptually dynamic object that oscillates between flatness and depth.
- Medium
- Acrylics, varnish and resin on mirror glass
- Dimensions
Notes
Invoice no. 2605095. Terms of payment: Immediate payment. Bank: Rise Sparekasse, Reg. no.: 0847, Account no.: 0000431443. IBAN: DK4108470000431443. SWIFT: RISEDK21. VAT no.: 35868038. Invoice number to be referenced on bank transfer.
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Vija Celmins
American (Latvian-born) · b. 1938

Celmins creates obsessively detailed photorealist paintings of everyday surfaces and textures, sharing Mühlenbrink's focus on visual deception and the philosophical act of looking. Her meticulous rendering of ocean surfaces, spider webs, and night skies prompts the same perceptual questioning about representation versus reality.
Raphaella Spence
British · b. 1978
Spence works in hyper realistic oil painting of transparent and reflective surfaces including glass and condensation, directly paralleling Mühlenbrink's trompe l'oeil explorations of water droplets and window panes. Both artists use photorealist technique to interrogate perception and the boundary between painted illusion and physical reality.
Tjalf Sparnaay
Dutch · b. 1954
Sparnaay is a Dutch hyperrealist painter who renders mundane everyday objects and packaging materials at monumental scale with obsessive detail, closely mirroring Mühlenbrink's large scale canvases and focus on material culture and everyday objects. Both artists elevate overlooked surfaces and humble materials into conceptually charged still life paintings.
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