Pashmin Art specialises in art and artist management.
In the beginning it is an idea, then a concept and finally it becomes a work of craftsmanship. Pashmin Art has a common goal, which is to establish the vision of the artists on the international market. They want to create a basis for the future marketing of art that builds different nations and cultures. Their projects inspire and stimulate desire.
Artists need to dedicate themselves to their art and to creating art. Pashmin art connects the artistic talent to commercial success and communicates the message of the art to collectors and art lovers internationally. The main objective is to break down prejudices and connect people with the support of art. All kinds of art, whether abstract or realistic: painting, graphic design, drawing, sculpture and photography, etc. The artists develop their artistic visions into meaningful works of art. But even after this creation, the artworks are not considered complete. On the contrary, the journey has only just begun.
Art should not remain in an atelier, but should be shown to art lovers. The aim is to make art accessible to an audience in various galleries, art fairs or art museums around the world. In addition to a historical and artistic classification of the works with individual advice, various projects are developed that allow access to national and international presentations.
Exhibition concepts in galleries, museums, famous art exhibitions and participation in auctions are realised on the basis of a marketing plan which promotes the development of the artist. By participating in auctions, the value on the art market automatically increases.
With Pashmin Art Management, art is in professional hands.
Keith Haring was born in 1958 in Reading, Pennsylvania. Using chalk, he began drawing small, vibrant characters and animals as well as various recognizable symbols such as dazibaos in New York
Keith Haring was born in 1958 in Reading, Pennsylvania. Using chalk, he began drawing small, vibrant characters and animals as well as various recognizable symbols such as dazibaos in New York
Because of his origins, Marc Chagall intensely felt the problems of the Jewish community in Europe at the beginning of the 20th century, just as he intuitively experienced the problems that Russia, his native country, was going through with the First World War and the October Revolution.
Driven by fascination as well as by contempt, Stéphane Mandelbaum (1961–1986) produced hundreds of portraits within a short creative period of just ten years. The subjects include Arthur Rimbaud, Pier Paolo Pasolini, Francis Bacon, Pierre Goldman, his grandfather Szulim, and his father Arié Mandelbaum, but also National Socialist criminals such as Joseph Goebbels and Ernst Röhm.
Cultural exchange and cooperation are important parts of the comprehensive Sino-European strategic partnership. They play an irreplaceable role in enhancing mutual understanding between people and promoting the value of our relations. At the 14th Sino-European Summit in 2011, the leaders stressed that cultural exchange is one of the three pillars of Sino-European relations.
Chagall is one of the most famous artists in France in the 20th century. His work has characteristics of surrealism and neo-primitivism.
Chagall was born on 7 July 1887 in Russia, in a Jewish family. He was brought up in the peace and tenderness of his mother, who taught him to read and to love the Bible and people. Vitebsk remained in Chagall’s imagination as the naive paradise of childhood, and the painter represented it in many paintings, in his youth and also later.