LUMAS Masters

WORLD-CLASS ART FOR YOUR HOME


Ed Sheeran

As a musician, Ed Sheeran fills stadiums; as a painter, he fills canvases—with the same rhythm and energy that made him a global star. In his Cosmic Car Paintings, the influence of Jackson Pollock meets the unmistakable signature of an international musician—and the attitude that sets him apart: proceeds from his exhibition raised over $1.25 million for the Ed Sheeran Foundation, giving children access to musical education—through art with an impact beyond the frame.


Candida Höfer

Candida Höfer, one of the most important students of the renowned “Becher class” at the Düsseldorf Art Academy, is renowned for her monumental photographs of interiors, where architecture and atmosphere are held in striking equilibrium. Her images capture the encounter of an award-winning photographer with spaces steeped in history and meaning. With photographic precision and poetic clarity, she reveals what makes these places unique — creating collectible works of rare depth and lasting relevance.


Gerhard Richter

Gerhard Richter is regarded as one of the most important contemporary artists—and as a master of stylistic diversity. For more than six decades, he has continuously reinvented his work: from photorealistic paintings and blurred images to large-scale squeegee abstractions. His style remains in constant flux—and his presence on the international art market is as powerful as ever.


Damien Hirst

The flourishing beauty of nature finds its fullest expression in The Secrets: with impressionist and pointillist touches, Damien Hirst expands the wide spectrum of his work between realism and abstraction with remarkable fluidity. Inspired by his 2023 series The Secret Gardens Paintings, he captures the untamed grace of wild gardens through a style imbued with the very essence of blooming landscapes. As nuanced as they are raw, as delicate as they are overwhelming, as subtle as they are opulent, Hirst’s meadows unfold before the viewer—an invitation into picturesque realms where the magnificence of untouched nature becomes an immediate, almost tangible experience.

Damien Hirst

Damien Hirst's latest series merges the fascinating approaches of the visionary conceptual artist and painter. Each of the works, ranging from abstract to photorealistic, is based on the dynamic process of action painting, infusing each of the pieces with pure ecstasy and capturing the untamed nature of the Atlantic. During the creation of his sensational “Cherry Blossoms” series, Hirst was inspired by random splashes of paint that leapt onto the surrounding canvases. The fluorescent sprinkles on a gray background marked the beginning of a spectacular series of works radiating the spirit of the British coast that has shaped the iconic artist.

Damien Hirst

Incarnation of beauty and transience if ever there was one, the butterfly is also a recurring theme in Damien Hirst’s work. In his very latest series of five pieces, the former master of the Young British Artists explores a topos that challenges our understanding of Western history. These screen-printed works, covered with a fine sheen, each bear the name of a queen of Indo-Persian, Byzantine, Chinese, Japanese, or Ethiopian origin. In this shimmering piece, a subtle mosaic composed of countless butterfly wings, Damien Hirst pays tribute to these queens—exceptional, yet largely unknown to the general public: Nur Jahan, Theodora, Wu Zetian, Suiko, and Taytu Betul.


Takashi Murakami

The artwork is an outstanding example of Takashi Murakami’s ability to reshape and reinterpret traditional Japanese art styles with a contemporary outlook. The cartoonish flowers that line the titular river lend the work a poignant and playful atmosphere, symbolizing both the beauty and transience of life.


Peter Doig

What makes Peter Doig one of the most influential figurative artists of the present day shines gently through the brilliant play of colors in “Alice at Boscoe's”: The piece, as a result of a year-long artistic process, shows his 10-year-old daughter in front of the family home in Trinidad – lost in thought, melting into her surroundings. The contrast of bright red tones embedded in deep green creates a serene radiance that captures the idyll of the south in the most personal way.


Jeff Koons

Pop Art, kitsch, commercial – the iconic balloon animals of Jeff Koons have been called many things. Above all though, these world-famous sculptures are a bold tribute of the life-affirming power of art.


Nobuyoshi Araki

In his Polaroids, the photographer and artist Nobuyoshi Araki captures fleeting moments of love, sexual expression and lust staged against an ever-present backdrop of mortality and existential struggle. Araki is one of the most influential Japanese photographers of all time, utilizing stark contrasts in both color and theme to span topics as diverse as fertility, existentialism and the fleeting nature of being. He is especially renowned as a chronicler of the times, whose works have shone a light on the changing sexual attitudes of his society.


Christo

Whether draping islands in pink floating fabric or wrapping landmarks like the Berlin Reichstag in swathes of cloth, the vast installments of Christo and Jean-Claude are instantly recognizable. Together, they created monumental artworks that will live long in the memory.


Marc Quinn

Marc Quinn is one of the most enduring figures of the “Young British Artists” movement, a stable of creatives who revolutionized the contemporary art world in the 1990s. His opulent floral arrangements create a sensory overload, straddling the line between art and science.


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