World’s Modern and Contemporary Art Masters This exhibition showcases a collection of key graphical works, which puts together trends of modern and contemporary art within the international art landscape. There over 200 works by 76 masters, which have been selected from the Arte 10 collection not only for their contribution as graphical artists but also for their widespread role as painters or sculptors. The exhibition features a selected group of artists from the 19th century, such as Eugene Delacroix, Edouard Manet, Odilon Redon, Camille Pissarro, Maurice Utrillo, Edouard Vuillard, and Henri Fatin-Latour. Modern artists in the exhibition include Henri Matisse, Leonard Foujita, Sonia Delaunay, Marie Laurencin, Henry Moore, Guillaume Cornelis van Beverloo Corneille, Serge Poliakoff, Piere Soulages, Bram Van Velde, and Zao Wou Ki. The American post-war artists in the repertoire are Jackson Pollock, Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol, Jasper Johns, Robert Indiana and Sol Lewitt, while the Latin-American Artists include Roberto Matta, Wifredo Lam, Rufino Tamayo and Julio Le Parc. The key Spanish artists who represent Spanish modern and contemporary art include Pablo Picasso, Jose Gutierrez Solana, Francisco Iturrino, Antoni Clave, Joan Miro, Antoni Tapies, Eduardo Chillida, Salvador Victoria, Eduardo Arroyo and Jaume Plensa. The 200 prints include various printing techniques as well as 22 objects by the artists. If not all encompassing, this exhibition exposes a glimpse of the art world from the period of symbolism, impressionism and until the modern era. All artworks are signed and numbered by the respective artists. Nevertheless, these exclude the artworks prior to 1900, in which the practice of signing was not yet well established. However, a good number of the artworks have been sealed by the erudite and respected dealer as well as graphical French editor; Henri M. Petiet (1894 – 1980). This exhibition is an initiative to foster international cultural exchange, art appreciation and intercultural relationship between Malaysia and Spain.