Christopher Wool, the American contemporary artist, is best known for his bold, text-based paintings that use stencilled letters, stark black-and-white contrasts, and fractured language to challenge ideas of communication and meaning. Emerging in the 1980s New York art scene, Wool quickly established himself as a leading voice in postmodern painting, blending influences from graffiti, minimalism, and abstraction. Alongside his word paintings, he has also produced gestural abstract works, photographs, and prints, each reflecting his ongoing interest in process, repetition, and the limits of visual language. Today, his works are held in major museum collections worldwide and continue to achieve significant results on the international art market.