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Rudi van de Wint (1942-2006) studied at the Rijksacademie in Amsterdam from 1961 to 1966. In 1977 he took part in the Documenta in Kassel. In addition to being a painter and graphic artist, he was an active sculptor.
From the early 1980s he worked in the dune area De Nollen near Den Helder. He added sculptures of gigantic size to the bunkers from the Second World War that were present there.
Well-known works by him are the large paintings that he applied in 1987 to the new meeting room of the House of Representatives. He also painted the ceiling of the Noordeinde Palace in The Hague and the Amsterdam courthouse. The Tongue of Lucifer (1993) on the Knardijk near Lelystad is also a well-known work by him.
The screen print offered was published by Utrecht's Prent 190 and framed in an aluminium frame.
Shortly after his death, an 18-metre high monument in the form of a spiral staircase was unveiled in Tenerife, a memorial made by Van de Wint to the plane crash of 27 March 1977.