Born 1955 United States. Known for: Female figure painting.
Ares Antoyan was born in 1955 in Los Angeles, the son of a French mother and an American father, also a painter. He attended the California Institute of Art. He lives and works in Lyon. "The...
Read full biography Ares Antoyan was born in 1955 in Los Angeles, the son of a French mother and an American father, also a painter. He attended the California Institute of Art. He lives and works in Lyon. "The paintings of Arès Antoyan possess the splendid shamelessness of women who love the violence of the desires...
Read full biography Ares Antoyan was born in 1955 in Los Angeles, the son of a French mother and an American father, also a painter. He attended the California Institute of Art. He lives and works in Lyon. "The paintings of Arès Antoyan possess the splendid shamelessness of women who love the violence of the desires that they provoke, and seem to experience an ineffable pleasure in showing off their charms. They reveal themselves without really offering themselves, as if the glances which touched them were for...
Read full biography Ares Antoyan was born in 1955 in Los Angeles, the son of a French mother and an American father, also a painter. He attended the California Institute of Art. He lives and works in Lyon. "The paintings of Arès Antoyan possess the splendid shamelessness of women who love the violence of the desires that they provoke, and seem to experience an ineffable pleasure in showing off their charms. They reveal themselves without really offering themselves, as if the glances which touched them were for them more disturbing than caresses." T. Demaubus
Ares Antoyan was born in 1955 in Los Angeles, the son of a French mother and an American father, also a painter. He attended the California Institute of Art. He lives and works in Lyon. "The paintings of Arès Antoyan possess the splendid shamelessness of women who love the violence of the desires that they provoke, and seem to experience an ineffable pleasure in showing off their charms. They reveal themselves without really offering themselves, as if the glances which touched them were for them more disturbing than caresses." T. Demaubus