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Nitzan Mintz
The One Sleeping In Life Will Not Wake (Hebrew)

Print —

$150 CAD

$150 CAD

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Silkscreen print on paper by Nitzan Mintz

  • 26" x 20"
  • Signed & Numbered by artist
  • Comes with certificate of authenticity
  • Edition of 30
  • Sold unframed
  • Hand-pulled silkscreen on paper

We offer framing options! Inquire at

info@station16.ca

We ship worldwide with Fedex, DHL Express, Purolator as well as several door-to-door art handling companies (limited to certain cities). Shipping charges vary depending on product size and weight. Many original and glass framed works must be shipped in wood crates, the gallery will contact you upon purchase to send you a shipping invoice. All other works such as prints and small originals are carefully packaged in tubes and boxes. All orders are shipped 48 hours after purchase, Monday to Friday during opening hours. Custom and duty fees are applied to shipments at the discretion of each receiving country. These charges are beyond our control and are the responsibility of the consignee. All sales are final. Please inspect your pieces for any possible damage and contact us within 48h of reception date if you find a problem. Contact us if you have specific shipping questions.

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About Nitzan Mintz

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Artist Bio

Nitzan Mintz is an artist and street-poet based in Tel Aviv. Her process integrates her poetic work and the material that contains it, actual location in the street. Mintz graduated from The Department of Fine Art and the Department of Creative Writing at Minshar College, Tel Aviv, and from the Helicon School of Creative Writing, Tel Aviv. She has showcased her work in galleries, art spaces and events in Israel and abroad.

Mintx’s poems combine the personal with the political; they are written out of an internal urge to verbalize a mental process in response to the outside world. Her art is created in specific selected locations; places with a greater and longer history than us. The locations she chooses to display her work within the urban landscape charge her work with social and political meaning.
She creates collages combining words and found materials; pieces of wood tossed aside, paper and plastic bags, and misused notebooks. The found objects Mintz picks up on the street mean the world to her and she strives to give them a new meaning and context. Her art is a curious and spontaneous relationship between words and material, each constantly switching roles, but creating a harmony of colour and shape, text and object.



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