Figurative Art

Figurative art engages with representation, drawing from the observable world to explore forms, objects, environments, and human presence. This collection features art editions that show varied approaches to depiction and narrative.

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199 products

Yoshitomo Nara - Marching on a Butterbur LeafYoshitomo Nara, Marching on a Butterbur Leaf
John Baldessari - Hand and Chin (with Entwined Hands)John Baldessari - Hand and Chin (with Entwined Hands)
John Baldessari - Hands and/ or FeetJohn Baldessari - Hands and/ or Feet
John Baldessari - Man with SnakeJohn Baldessari - Man with Snake
John Baldessari - Man with Snake Sale price€2.800,00
John Baldessari - Zorro (Two Gestures and One Mark)John Baldessari - Zorro (Two Gestures and One Mark)
John Baldessari - BelchJohn Baldessari - Belch
John Baldessari - Belch Sale price€2.800,00
Andy Warhol - LionAndy Warhol - Lion
Andy Warhol – Lion Sale price€2.400,00
Luc Tuymans - Wenn der Frühling kommtLuc Tuymans - Wenn der Frühling kommt
Mel Ramos - Señorita Rio
Mel Ramos - Señorita Rio Sale price€2.800,00
Candida Höfer - University Library Hamburg A
Candida Höfer - Teatro Nacional de Sao Carlos Lisboa IIICandida Höfer - Teatro Nacional de Sao Carlos Lisboa III
Candida Höfer - Teatro Degollado Guadalajara IIICandida Höfer - Teatro Degollado Guadalajara III
Zhang Xiaogang - Two SistersZhang Xiaogang - Two Sisters
Zhang Xiaogang - Two Sisters Sale price€3.200,00
Sold out
Yoshitomo Nara, Miss SpringYoshitomo Nara, Miss Spring
Yoshitomo Nara - Miss Spring Sale price€5.500,00
Yinka Shonibare - Dreamscape
Yinka Shonibare - Dreamscape Sale price€2.400,00
Sold out
Wes Lang - To Tell The TruthWes Lang - To Tell The Truth
Wes Lang - To Tell the Truth Sale price€4.000,00
Wes Lang - Thoughts For The Free Life #15Wes Lang - Thoughts For The Free Life #15
Wes Lang - EverythingWes Lang - Everything
Wes Lang - Everything Sale price€1.800,00
Tracey Emin - SixteenTracey Emin - Sixteen
Tracey Emin - Sixteen Sale price€2.900,00
Tracey Emin - I Just Felt HurtTracey Emin - I Just Felt Hurt
Tracey Emin - I Just Felt Hurt Sale price€7.800,00
Thomas Struth - James Simon GalerieThomas Struth - James Simon Galerie
Thomas Struth - DaintreeThomas Struth - Daintree
Thomas Struth - Daintree Sale price€1.300,00
Thomas Ruff - Zeitungsfoto 071, Sterne 22h 24m / -20
Thomas Ruff - Zeitungsfoto 071 Sale price€2.200,00
Thomas Ruff, Untitled (Sterne 17h 38m/-30°, 1990)Thomas Ruff, Untitled (Sterne 17h 38m/-30°, 1990)
Thomas Ruff - SeeroseThomas Ruff - Seerose
Thomas Ruff - Seerose Sale price€1.300,00
Thomas Ruff - Queen in CarThomas Ruff - Queen in Car
Thomas Ruff - Queen in Car Sale price€1.400,00
Thomas Ruff - Negatives II
Thomas Ruff - Negatives II Sale price€2.500,00
Thomas Ruff - FliegerThomas Ruff - Flieger
Thomas Ruff - Flieger Sale price€1.300,00
Thomas Ruff - 3-D New York (Bronx)
Thomas Ruff - 3-D New York (Bronx) Sale price€1.200,00
Thomas Demand - GrottoThomas Demand - Grotto
Thomas Demand - Grotto Sale price€1.600,00
The Connor Brothers - We Are All in the Gutter
Takashi Murakami - Flowers of GratitudeTakashi Murakami - Flowers of Gratitude
Tacita Dean - La Puerta del DiabloTacita Dean - La Puerta del Diablo
Tacita Dean - La Puerta del Diablo Sale price€2.600,00
Sigmar Polke - KnöpfeSigmar Polke - Knöpfe
Sigmar Polke - Knöpfe Sale price€800,00
Sigmar Polke, Dr Pabscht het z'Schpiez...Sigmar Polke, Dr Pabscht het z'Schpiez...
Shirin Neshat, Tooba
Shirin Neshat - Tooba Sale price€5.900,00
Shepard Fairey - Ideal Power DoveShepard Fairey - Ideal Power Dove
Shepard Fairey - Commanda Vienna
Sarah Morris - Color Referents (Miami)
Robert Longo - Janet (from Men in the Cities)Robert Longo - Janet (from Men in the Cities)
Robert Longo - Black Palms
Robert Longo - Black Palms Sale price€3.400,00
Richard Prince, Good RevolutionRichard Prince, Good Revolution
Richard Prince - Good Revolution Sale price€3.400,00
Richard Hamilton, Bathroom Fig. 1
Richard Hamilton - Bathroom Fig. 1 Sale price€4.600,00
Rashid Johnson - Untitled Anxious PrintRashid Johnson - Untitled Anxious Print
Peter Doig - Two StudentsPeter Doig - Two Students
Peter Doig - Two Students Sale price€2.000,00
Peter Doig - MaracasPeter Doig - Maracas
Peter Doig - Maracas Sale price€4.000,00
Peter Doig - Lapeyrouse WallPeter Doig - Lapeyrouse Wall
Peter Doig - Lapeyrouse Wall Sale price€5.600,00
Peter Doig - FishermanPeter Doig - Fisherman
Peter Doig - Fisherman Sale price€2.400,00
Otis Kwame Kye Quaicoe - View of Yoei William
01

Collect Figurative Art

Explore the human form, emotional nuance, and narrative strength through Figurative Art. From expressive drawings to sculptural studies and editioned prints, figuration remains one of the most enduring—and versatile—approaches in contemporary art. Our curated selection of limited edition prints, photographs, and sculptures celebrates the diversity of figurative practices, offering collectors access to museum-quality works by established and emerging artists alike. Whether you’re drawn to classical realism or stylized abstraction rooted in the body, collecting figurative art brings timeless relevance and intimate visual storytelling into your space.

Dana Schutz - Back Surgery in Bed
02

What Is Figurative Art?

Figurative art refers broadly to artworks that represent real-world subjects—most commonly the human figure—rather than abstract forms. While rooted in centuries-old artistic traditions, figuration has undergone a significant evolution throughout the 20th and 21st centuries. In contrast to earlier academic realism, modern figurative artists have embraced distortion, symbolism, and psychological depth, reinterpreting the body as a vehicle for cultural, political, and personal narratives.

Following the rise of abstraction in the early 20th century, figuration was reasserted by artists like Lucian Freud, Alice Neel, and Francis Bacon—each exploring raw humanity in stark, sometimes unsettling ways. In more recent decades, contemporary artists such as Marlene Dumas, Kerry James Marshall, Dana Schutz, and Lynette Yiadom-Boakye have pushed figuration into new conceptual and sociopolitical territory.

Today, figurative artworks, whether in the form of editioned prints, photographs, or sculptures, remain vital within both private and institutional collections. This enduring relevance is driven not only by the expressive potential of the body, but also by figuration’s unique ability to reflect contemporary identity, memory, and representation.

Marcel Dzama, La Revolución va a Ser Femenina
03

A Return to Figurative Art

In recent years, the international art world has seen a powerful return to figurative painting and sculpture, driven by a renewed interest in narrative, subjectivity, and cultural identity. Amid a broader climate of social reflection, artists have turned to the body not as an aesthetic relic, but as a critical site of experience and belonging. Figuration allows for a direct, often intimate engagement with themes of race, gender, sexuality, and history—offering a visible and emotionally resonant counterpoint to the cerebral detachment of conceptual or purely abstract work.

While this current wave has brought greater visibility to previously underrepresented voices—especially Black artists, women artists, and non-Western perspectives—the renewed interest in the figure is not entirely new. In the 1990s, artists such as Peter Doig, Cecily Brown, Luc Tuymans, and Daniel Richter reasserted figuration at a time when post-conceptual and minimalist approaches still dominated institutional discourse. Their works combined painterly experimentation with psychological depth, cultural memory, and visual ambiguity, setting the stage for the wide-ranging figurative renaissance of the 21st century.

In recent years, figures like Amoako Boafo, Jordan Casteel, Salman Toor, and Otis Kwame Kye Quaicoe have brought figurative art into new, urgent conversations. Their practices center marginalized identities while challenging the historical hierarchies of the Western art canon. Through bold portraiture and symbolic mise-en-scène, they use figuration as a vehicle for inclusion—foregrounding personal narratives, diasporic experiences, and cultural specificity with striking immediacy.

Far from signaling a return to tradition, today’s figurative art marks a vital reorientation of values. It offers artists a means of claiming space, revising history, and asserting presence—all while reaffirming the enduring visual and emotional power of the human form.

01

Collect Figurative Art

Explore the human form, emotional nuance, and narrative strength through Figurative Art. From expressive drawings to sculptural studies and editioned prints, figuration remains one of the most enduring—and versatile—approaches in contemporary art. Our curated selection of limited edition prints, photographs, and sculptures celebrates the diversity of figurative practices, offering collectors access to museum-quality works by established and emerging artists alike. Whether you’re drawn to classical realism or stylized abstraction rooted in the body, collecting figurative art brings timeless relevance and intimate visual storytelling into your space.

02

What Is Figurative Art?

Figurative art refers broadly to artworks that represent real-world subjects—most commonly the human figure—rather than abstract forms. While rooted in centuries-old artistic traditions, figuration has undergone a significant evolution throughout the 20th and 21st centuries. In contrast to earlier academic realism, modern figurative artists have embraced distortion, symbolism, and psychological depth, reinterpreting the body as a vehicle for cultural, political, and personal narratives.

Following the rise of abstraction in the early 20th century, figuration was reasserted by artists like Lucian Freud, Alice Neel, and Francis Bacon—each exploring raw humanity in stark, sometimes unsettling ways. In more recent decades, contemporary artists such as Marlene Dumas, Kerry James Marshall, Dana Schutz, and Lynette Yiadom-Boakye have pushed figuration into new conceptual and sociopolitical territory.

Today, figurative artworks, whether in the form of editioned prints, photographs, or sculptures, remain vital within both private and institutional collections. This enduring relevance is driven not only by the expressive potential of the body, but also by figuration’s unique ability to reflect contemporary identity, memory, and representation.

03

A Return to Figurative Art

In recent years, the international art world has seen a powerful return to figurative painting and sculpture, driven by a renewed interest in narrative, subjectivity, and cultural identity. Amid a broader climate of social reflection, artists have turned to the body not as an aesthetic relic, but as a critical site of experience and belonging. Figuration allows for a direct, often intimate engagement with themes of race, gender, sexuality, and history—offering a visible and emotionally resonant counterpoint to the cerebral detachment of conceptual or purely abstract work.

While this current wave has brought greater visibility to previously underrepresented voices—especially Black artists, women artists, and non-Western perspectives—the renewed interest in the figure is not entirely new. In the 1990s, artists such as Peter Doig, Cecily Brown, Luc Tuymans, and Daniel Richter reasserted figuration at a time when post-conceptual and minimalist approaches still dominated institutional discourse. Their works combined painterly experimentation with psychological depth, cultural memory, and visual ambiguity, setting the stage for the wide-ranging figurative renaissance of the 21st century.

In recent years, figures like Amoako Boafo, Jordan Casteel, Salman Toor, and Otis Kwame Kye Quaicoe have brought figurative art into new, urgent conversations. Their practices center marginalized identities while challenging the historical hierarchies of the Western art canon. Through bold portraiture and symbolic mise-en-scène, they use figuration as a vehicle for inclusion—foregrounding personal narratives, diasporic experiences, and cultural specificity with striking immediacy.

Far from signaling a return to tradition, today’s figurative art marks a vital reorientation of values. It offers artists a means of claiming space, revising history, and asserting presence—all while reaffirming the enduring visual and emotional power of the human form.

Otis Kwame Kye Quaicoe - View of Yoei WilliamDana Schutz - Back Surgery in BedMarcel Dzama, La Revolución va a Ser Femenina
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