Omer Tiroche Gallery
Miami Beach

Works Available By
- Affandi
- Yaacov Agam
- Ai Weiwei
- Ghada Amer
- Harold Ancart
- Karel Appel
- Arman
- Jean (Hans) Arp
- Miquel Barceló
- Jean-Michel Basquiat
- Vanessa Beecroft
- Jonathan Bermudes
- Mike Bidlo
- Alighiero Boetti
- Christian Boltanski
- Georges Braque
- Sascha Braunig
- Alexander Calder
- Anthony Caro
- Maurizio Cattelan
- Marc Chagall
- John Chamberlain
- Christo
- Chu Teh-Chun
- Chuang Che
- Chun Kwang Young
- Chung SangHwa
- Robert Combas
- Cui Jie
- Salvador Dalí
- Jim Dine
- Óscar Domínguez
- Jean Dubuffet
- Tracey Emin
- Léonard Tsuguharu Foujita
- Sam Francis
- Adrian Ghenie
- Sam Gilliam
- Subodh Gupta
- Keith Haring
- Hans Hartung
- Damien Hirst
- Hans Hofmann
- Gary Hume
- Jasper Johns
- Anish Kapoor
- KAWS
- Bharti Kher
- Anselm Kiefer
- Kim Minjung
- Kim TschangYeul
- Guillermo Kuitca
- Yayoi Kusama
- Sol LeWitt
- Li Shan
- Richard Long
- Robert Longo
- Mai Trung Thu
- Henri Matisse
- Joan Miró
- Joan Mitchell
- Henry Moore
- François Morellet
- Robert Motherwell
- Vik Muniz
- Takashi Murakami
- Wangechi Mutu
- Yoshitomo Nara
- Kohei Nawa
- Claes Oldenburg
- Pablo Picasso
- John Piper
- Serge Poliakoff
- Sigmar Polke
- Neil Raitt
- Mel Ramos
- Ren Hong
- Anselm Reyle
- Bridget Riley
- Norman Rockwell
- James Rosenquist
- Reuven Rubin
- Ed Ruscha
- Niki de Saint Phalle
- Sheng Qi
- Shi Xinning
- Kazuo Shiraga
- Pierre Soulages
- Rudolf Stingel
- Kumi Sugai
- Aya Takano
- Takis
- Yves Tanguy
- Walasse Ting
- Joseph Mallord William Turner
- Günther Uecker
- Victor Vasarely
- Joana Vasconcelos
- Édouard Vuillard
- Andy Warhol
- Franz West
- WOLS
- Christopher Wool
- Xue Song
- Yan Pei Ming
- Lynette Yiadom-Boakye
- Yue Minjun
- Zao Wou-Ki
- Zeng Fanzhi
Yue Minjun
(Chinese, born 1962)
Yue Minjun is a contemporary Chinese artist known for his inventive take on self-portraiture. Grouped into the Cynical Realism movement in China, alongside artists Fang Lijun and Liu Wei, he refutes this labelling of his work. His brightly colored depictions of maniacally laughing figures are influenced both by Pop Art and Surrealism. His works act as a tacit form of social and political critique which deals with both Chinese history and the Western canon of art. “I’m actually trying to make sense of the world,” he said of his work. “There’s nothing cynical or absurd in what I do.” Born in 1962 in Daqing City, China, Minjun studied at Hebei Normal University in the 1980s, training as a painter, sculptor, ...

