Auction 36 A beautiful sale with contemporary Israeli art for investment and promising young artists - stay in the air conditioner: delivery with our courier for only NIS 39
By KooKoo
Aug 26, 2023
Israel

Excellent art awaits you at KooKoo's 36th auction:


Cabessa, Zoya Cheakasky, Bazooka Joe, Orit Akta, Iza(Bella) Volovnik, Reut Dafna and Israel Dror Hemed with oil paintings and paper works


We will introduce you to three new artists:

Katia Gali, the well-known model who fell into drugs and deteriorated into a life on the street, rose to life and you must see her paintings!

Doron Akiva paints naive paintings with a limited palette of pleasant colors

And Liron Yanconsky,  a 30-year-old watercolorist with 400,000 followers in the media and 3 best-selling books on Amazon (!) with simply crazy works


and also-

Roni Yoffe with large, Israeli works that will lift the mood and morale

Daniel Zuberi will fill our walls with flowers

Erez Pliscov with 4 views where every word is unnecessary - really, judge for yourself

Nurit Arbel will once again excite us

And Leegan Koo for lovers of high-quality pop art


There are many more fine works - just enjoy the catalog, we have blessed the young artists and yourselves, we all deserve a little satisfaction!

Questions 0558859447


More details
The auction has ended

LOT 16:

Bazooka Joe
"Miri" 2021

catalog
  Previous item
Next item 
Sold for: $500
Start price:
$ 500
Estimated price :
$1,500 - $2,000
Buyer's Premium: 15%

"Miri" 2021

A major work by the artist fetching thousands and tens of thousands of dollars at auctions recently - Bazooka Joe! In a late 2021 piece, which came directly from the artist to the auction house. Who knows who he painted?


Posca and ink on framed paper

62/52 cm (framed 62/52 cm) 
signed

A rare opportunity to purchase an original work on wood by the artist Bazooka Joe - not available from his works, everything is pre-sold to several collectors

The esteemed artist Bazooka Joe, a painter and sculptor whose works sell for tens of thousands of dollars and adorn the walls of the people of the upper echelons in Israel.

Adi Mendel (55) grew up in Bat Yam, the only son of a real estate and car dealer father and a housewife mother. It was a wealthy family that lacked almost nothing - except what a child really needs. Says and does not specify. "My mother would draw. Not for a living, because she did not have to work, but as a hobby. I, perhaps in response to my mother's attitude, could not stand paintings. I hated colors. I did not touch the brush. At the end it is probably in the DNA.
When he became a drug addict, his family members, including his brother from his father’s late marriage, turned their backs on him. "I had no one to ask for help from, " he says, "so I started breaking the law, mostly on property offenses, to fund the drugs. I did it reluctantly, with great sorrow. 'Forced crime, ' I call it."

The drug addiction and crime brought him to a total of six years behind bars, with all this time a tremendous talent hidden deep within him and not knowing how to break out. "I saw death with my own eyes, " says Bazooka Joe, mentioning, once again, how long the distance is between someone who was so close to ending his life in a tiny cell, alone, and someone who is gaining fame today.
His talent stood out from the canvas in the eyes of anyone who witnessed his paintings. He asked his stage name from the character on the gum covers. "Bazooka Joe was a sniper in the United States Army and I was a sniper with a paintbrush, " he explains. "Plus, I connect to the naivety of the bright colors."

His works also began to make waves among those interested in the field of art. He left the gallery three years ago, after his works were priced at well over a thousand dollars. Among the buyers of Bazooka Joe's art are businessman, controlling shareholder and CEO Castro Gabi Rotter, publicist Rani Rahav and the Wertheimer industrialist family. They are now joined by another satisfied customer - the prison service. Today, Bazooka Joe focuses on art. Addiction to creation has replaced drug addiction, "but it's a good addiction, " he says.

To close a circle with his rough past, the artist painted with the approval of the Tel Aviv Municipality on the walls of the Abu Kabir Prison (photo attached)


catalog
  Previous item
Next item