A Death 4-4, 2012

$40,000.00

acrylic on black linen framed, LG-26" LED HDTV, Sony Blu-ray DVD player,  surge protector, HDMI cable,   TV & DVD remote controls, Nielsen Metal frame, foam-board, Den Glass, aluminum bars, wood, hanging wire, various fasteners

54 9/16 x 28 11/16 x 2 1/2 in

138.59 x 72.87 x 6.35 cm

Film:  Life Cycle, 2013, Griffin Christensen collaboration with ZanZ, HD video, color, sound, a performance by Thomas ZanZ.

Full-length film: 131:26 minute loop.

Drawing:  Melancholy Man, 1985, Thomas Christensen (Thomas Zanz),  charcoal on newsprint under Den Glass.

18 x 22 5/8 in         45.72 x 57.47 cm

For further information, please refer to the future blog.

Sold as series.

Shipping: Email art@thomaszanz.com for inquiries.

acrylic on black linen framed, LG-26" LED HDTV, Sony Blu-ray DVD player,  surge protector, HDMI cable,   TV & DVD remote controls, Nielsen Metal frame, foam-board, Den Glass, aluminum bars, wood, hanging wire, various fasteners

54 9/16 x 28 11/16 x 2 1/2 in

138.59 x 72.87 x 6.35 cm

Film:  Life Cycle, 2013, Griffin Christensen collaboration with ZanZ, HD video, color, sound, a performance by Thomas ZanZ.

Full-length film: 131:26 minute loop.

Drawing:  Melancholy Man, 1985, Thomas Christensen (Thomas Zanz),  charcoal on newsprint under Den Glass.

18 x 22 5/8 in         45.72 x 57.47 cm

For further information, please refer to the future blog.

Sold as series.

Shipping: Email art@thomaszanz.com for inquiries.

  • Life Cycle-4 is an installation painting composed of four overlapping panels—Childhood, Midlife, Old Age, and Death—each marking a distinct stage in the arc of a human life. The text shifts from “WHEN I WAS A KID” to “AGE/RAGE” to “PEACE,” mirroring the emotional progression from innocence to volatility to acceptance. Each panel contains a F.O.L.P. (Figure of Limited Predictability) paint event, forming the connective thread across the work.

    The final panel incorporates two embedded elements: a charcoal drawing preserved beneath Den Glass, and a built-in HDTV playing Life Cycle, a 131-minute looping performance. Together they create a layered finale—memory preserved beneath the surface, time repeating above it. Viewed as a single work, Life Cycle-4 becomes a slow-moving portrait of existence.

    https://static1.squarespace.com/static/6933992e3d544c58832a9410/t/69d6485deca79e4b0a27c334/1775651100704/LC4_HS_Color.jpeg