Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 10

Carlos Gamez de Francisco
Stages of Dreaming II

2023

About the Item

Stages of Dreaming II displays a female figure wearing a sage green dress and a large bright blue and purple hat. An extra long stem of a flower extends from the top of the colorful hat. As the rim of the hat covers the female's eyes, Carlos Gamez de Francsico creates a playful and mysterious composition on a green monochromatic background that captivates the viewer's attention, inviting them to uncover the beauty in present mystery.
  • Creator:
  • Creation Year:
    2023
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 52 in (132.08 cm)Width: 38 in (96.52 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Framing:
    Framing Options Available
  • Condition:
  • Gallery Location:
    Nashville, TN
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU1675213322171
More From This SellerView All
  • The Empress' Salon
    Located in Nashville, TN
    Rocky Horton is a conceptually based multi-disciplinary artist whose work spans painting, sculpture, video, and performance. Horton received his undergr...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Acrylic, Screen

  • Fiori IV
    Located in Nashville, TN
    Rocky Horton is a conceptually based multi-disciplinary artist whose work spans painting, sculpture, video, and performance. Horton received his undergr...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Acrylic, Screen

  • Red Rose
    By Carlos Gamez de Francisco
    Located in Nashville, TN
    Red Rose displays a female figure wearing a sage green dress and a large purple hat with a loosely rendered bouquet of red flowers on top. The 3-dim...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Paintings

    Materials

    Acrylic, Canvas

  • Stages of Dreaming I
    By Carlos Gamez de Francisco
    Located in Nashville, TN
    Stages of Dreaming I displays a female figure wearing a sage green dress and a large bright blue and purple hat. Two large leaves extends from the t...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Paintings

    Materials

    Acrylic, Canvas

  • The Rider
    By Carlos Gamez de Francisco
    Located in Nashville, TN
    The Rider displays a female figure wearing a long pink skirt and dark blue sunglasses. The model sits on a wooden donkey with her bare feet on its head. A butterfly rests on a piece ...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Acrylic

  • Abigail
    Located in Nashville, TN
    Abigail portrays a minimalistic character in a green background wearing a Balenciaga shirt and rainbow hair. Multiple arms holding cigarettes with colorful tears dripping down their ...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Figurative Paintings

    Materials

    Acrylic, Canvas

You May Also Like
  • Archaic Hercules Skinning a Rabbit - Contemporary, Sun, Rabbit, Red, Yellow
    By Alexandru Rădvan
    Located in Berlin, DE
    Archaic Hercules Skinning a Rabbit, 2019 Acrylic on canvas 53.14 H x 55.11 W in. 135 H x 140 W cm In classical mythology, Hercules is famous for his strength and his numerous far-ra...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Figurative Paintings

    Materials

    Acrylic, Canvas

  • "Roxbury" Massachusetts, Acrylic, Street Scene, Winner Student Prize
    Located in Detroit, MI
    SALE ONE WEEK ONLY “Roxbury” is a stunning landscape of architecture and city deleterious. Moon-Joo Lee received her MFA from Cranbrook Academy of Art, Department of Painting in 2003 and received the schools' Top Prize with this painting. “Roxbury” subsequently was on display at Chrysler’s World Headquarters for a period of time. While at Cranbrook she began to document the ubiquitous construction sites skirting Detroit and similar cities across the country. The transitory urban fabric became her compelling subject, emblematic of fluctuating socio-economic conditions and a widespread culture of uncertainty. - Joe Houston of Cranbrook Art Museum. Lee’s painting “Roxbury” captures the cycle of construction, destruction and reconstruction that perpetually transforms the American city scene. In this image, a business that boasts NEW in its signage is already in the process of being destroyed. This could be a scene of bombing or environmental damage, but per Moon-Joo Lee’s aesthetics, the mountainous terrain of assorted refuse is there to remind the viewer that perhaps new and better do not necessarily mean that nor do they guarantee positive change. Lee's contemporary landscape underscores the extent to which nature has been supplanted by a manufactured environment, portraying rampant cultural transformation as a modern expression of manifest destiny. Moon-Joo Lee is one of the many well-known artists who attended The Cranbrook Academy of Art in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, that was designed by architect and faculty member, Eliel Saarinen who collaborated with Charles and Ray Eames on chair and furniture design. It is the country’s top ranked, graduate-only program in architecture, design and fine art. Each year, just 75 students are invited to study and live on the landmark Saarinen-designed campus which features: private studios, state-of-the art workshops, the renowned Cranbrook Art Museum and 300 acres of forests, lakes and streams, all a short drive from the city of Detroit. The focus at Cranbrook is on studio practice in one of ten disciplines including Architecture, 2D and 3D Design, Ceramics, Fiber, Metalsmithing, Painting, Photography, Print Media, and Sculpture. The program is anchored by celebrated Artists- and Designers-in-Residence, one for each discipline, all of whom live and practice on campus alongside the graduate students. Numerous creative artists who are alumni of Cranbrook include: Harry Bertoia, Florence Knoll, Jack Lenor Larsen, Donald Lipski, Duane Hanson, Nick Cave, Hani Rashid, George Nelson, Urban Jupena (Nationally recognized fiber artist), Artis Lane (the first African-American artist to have her sculpture, "Sojourner Truth," commissioned for the Emancipation Hall in the Capital Visitor Center in Washington DC), Cory Puhlman (televised Pastry Chef extraordinaire), Thom O’Connor (Lithographs), Paul Evans (Brutalist-inspired sculpted metal furnishings), Eugene Caples (small bronze images/abstract), Morris Brose (Bronze Sculptures), Herb Babcock (blown glass), Larry Butcher (mixed media), Lauren Anais Hussey (Abstract), Andrea Eis (film, photography), Lilian Swann Saarinen (Sculpture), Douglas Semivan...
    Category

    Early 2000s Contemporary Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Acrylic

  • Magnificence 6 - Impasto Thick Paint Gold and Black Original Artwork
    By Cynthia Coulombe Bégin
    Located in Los Angeles, CA
    Coulombe-Bégin's dynamic acrylic on canvas works seek to produce a metamorphic interpretation of the artist's inner identity. Her paintings make ample use of contrasting colors to cr...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Figurative Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Acrylic

  • Luis Miguel Valdes, La soledad de las columnas, Oil on canvas, 55x182 in
    By Luis Miguel Valdes
    Located in Miami, FL
    Luis Miguel Valdes (Cuba, 1949) 'La soledad de las columnas', 2018 oil on canvas 55.2 x 181.2 in. (140 x 460 cm.) ID: VAL-334
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Paintings

    Materials

    Acrylic, Cotton Canvas, Oil Pastel, Oil Crayon, Oil, Canvas

  • Gyre
    Located in Detroit, MI
    Gyre acrylic, spray paint on canvas 80" x 96" 2022 Part of the New Minority Series Dennis Jones was first introduced to the use of a bidet while being extremely ill in Hurghada, Egypt. He has played the game of ‘Jenga’ with prostitutes in Phuket, Thailand. Once he hiked down to the bottom of the Grand Canyon from the North Rim and back in twelve hours. Jones has also visited fifty US National Parks. The work of Dennis Jones is growth oriented. There is diversity among his oeuvre and much risk in such an approach. Eschewing a ‘signature style’ that he considers to be boring, creatively limiting and market driven, he prefers to consider how method and expression intermingle and form a conceptual basis. A cursory glance may consider his prodigious output to lack focus, but a deeper reading reveals that he remains true to himself and allows his work to take him where it needs to go. There has always been the presence of a figure in his work, either implied, or directly visible. One can trace several years of development from his interest in figurative and cartoon-like imagery in, Toyland (2006), through his foray into text based work (2007-13) and a later influence of abstraction (2012-18). Following this trajectory brings one to his current body of work that combines figuration, cartoons and abstraction. He is a visual artist, educator, and architect. Each of the ‘hats’ he wears directly influence his work. He states that ‘a fascination with an integration of material, process and expression, truth of emotion and visually communicating thought are what sustain and drive him as an artist. Jones has participated in over seventy solo and group shows that include local, national and international venues. His creative output includes paintings, sculptures, drawings, installations, videos, photos, books, teaching and residential architecture. Jones’ work was selected to be included in the New American Paintings 2019 Midwest Competition Publication, juried by Staci Boris, Associate Director of Exhibitions, School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Currently, his focus is on a growing body of paintings, in mixed media, on canvas that combine abstraction, figuration and cartoon imagery. Jones had a one person exhibition at the University of Michigan in September through December of 2018. A review of the show can be read on the page titled, Candyland Review. Earlier the same year, He curated an exhibition titled, SIX, that opened in January of 2018, at The Janice Charach Gallery; a five thousand square foot space, located in West Bloomfield, Michigan. The exhibition featured the work of six Detroit artists and provided adequate space for each to show a body of work…essentially six individual shows in one space. Selected venues that have shown Jones’ work include: The OK Harris Gallery, New York; Galerie Protege, NY; The Mary Washington Galleries, Mary Washington University, Fredericksburg, Maryland; The Kraft Lieberman Gallery, Chicago; The Drift Gallery, Portsmouth, NH; The Project Room, Lincoln, NE; The Art Gallery of Windsor, Windsor, Canada; Artcite, Windsor, CA; The Thames Gallery, Chatham, Ontario, Canada; The Kenderdine Art Gallery, University of Saskatchewan, Saskatchewan, CA; Definitely Superior Gallery, Thunder Bay, ON, CA; Gallery Lambton, Sarnia, ON, CA, WKP Kennedy, North Bay...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Figurative Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Spray Paint, Acrylic

  • 50/50
    By Doug Ohlson
    Located in Boca Raton, FL
    Doug Ohlson began his education in a number of small colleges, and a three year period in the U.S. Marines before graduating from the University of Minnesota with a B.A. in fine art....
    Category

    20th Century Contemporary Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Acrylic

Recently Viewed

View All