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Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

MODERN STYLE

The first decades of the 20th century were a period of artistic upheaval, with modern art movements including Cubism, Surrealism, Futurism and Dadaism questioning centuries of traditional views of what art should be. Using abstraction, experimental forms and interdisciplinary techniques, painters, sculptors, photographers, printmakers and performance artists all pushed the boundaries of creative expression.

Major exhibitions, like the 1913 Armory Show in New York City — also known as the “International Exhibition of Modern Art,” in which works like the radically angular Nude Descending a Staircase by Marcel Duchamp caused a sensation — challenged the perspective of viewers and critics and heralded the arrival of modern art in the United States. But the movement’s revolutionary spirit took shape in the 19th century.

The Industrial Revolution, which ushered in new technology and cultural conditions across the world, transformed art from something mostly commissioned by the wealthy or the church to work that responded to personal experiences. The Impressionist style emerged in 1860s France with artists like Claude Monet, Paul Cézanne and Edgar Degas quickly painting works that captured moments of light and urban life. Around the same time in England, the Pre-Raphaelites, like Edward Burne-Jones and Dante Gabriel Rossetti, borrowed from late medieval and early Renaissance art to imbue their art with symbolism and modern ideas of beauty.

Emerging from this disruption of the artistic status quo, modern art went further in rejecting conventions and embracing innovation. The bold legacy of leading modern artists Georges Braque, Pablo Picasso, Frida Kahlo, Salvador Dalí, Henri Matisse, Joan Miró, Marc Chagall, Piet Mondrian and many others continues to inform visual culture today.

Find a collection of modern paintings, sculptures, prints and other fine art on 1stDibs.

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Style: Modern
Figures - Original Pencil on Paper - 1930s
Located in Roma, IT
Figures is an original modern drawing in pencil on paper realized by an anonymous Italian artist in 1930s. Sheet dimension:34 x 25.5 good conditions except for the folding line in the middle of the paper. The artwork represents two figures reading...
Category

1930s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pencil

Claude Muncaster Landscape Near Shrewsbury watercolour English countryside
Located in London, GB
We acquired a series of paintings from Claude Muncaster's studio. To find more scroll down to "More from this Seller" and below it click on "See all from this seller." Claude Muncaster (1903-1974) Landscape Near Shrewsbury Watercolour 26x36cm Signed lower left Claude Grahame Muncaster, RWS, ROI, RBA, SMA was the son of Oliver Hall RA. At the age of fifteen his career as a landscape painter began, and he soon took to the seas, spending the 1920s and 30s travelling the world with his sketchbook in a series of vessels. With the outbreak of war and he joined the RNVR training as a navigator. Having left school at fifteen his mathematics was very weak and it was a relief for all when his artistic talents meant he was recruited as a camofleur. A master of capturing seascapes he was therefore able to hide huge ships ‘in plain sight’ with clever disguises. After the war he painted for the Royal Family and was a frequent guest at Sandringham. Claude Muncaster was a watercolourist known for his landscapes and maritime scenes. He was born Grahame Hall, the son of the Royal Academician Oliver Hall who taught his son to paint from an early age; Grahame first exhibited his work aged 15 and a few years later was showing at the RA. However, he adopted the name Claude Muncaster in 1922 to dissociate his career from that of his father. Muncaster’s primary choice of subject matter came from a genuine love of the sea. He made several long-distance sea voyages, including one around the Horn...
Category

Mid-20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

Nude - Original Watercolor on Paper by Jean Delpech - 1960s
Located in Roma, IT
Nude 1935's is an original drawing in watercolor a on paper, realized by Jean Delpech (1988-1916). Sheet dimension: 13.1 x 29.5 cm. The artwork represents a nude woman lying down,...
Category

1950s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

Prof Sir Albert Richardson PRA Farmhouse 1963 Watercolour Architectural drawing
Located in London, GB
To see our other Modern British Art, scroll down to "More from this Seller" and below it click on "See all from this Seller" - or send us a message if you cannot find the artist you ...
Category

1960s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

Landscape - Original Watercolor signed "Chantau Reclan" - Early 20th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Landscape is an original modern artwork signed "Chantau Reclan". Original colored watercolor on paper. Hand-signed by the artist on the lower right. Good conditions.
Category

Early 20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

Untitled (Boat Repair)
Located in Dallas, TX
Francis Chapin was one of the most celebrated painters in Chicago during his lifetime. When he was a young art student, Valley House founder, Donald Vogel, painted with "Chape" on th...
Category

1940s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Watercolor

Trees - Original Drawing in Pencil and Charcoal - 20th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Trees is an original drawing in pencil and charcoal, realized by an Anonymous artist of the XX century. The state of preservation of the artwork is very good and aged with some fold...
Category

20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pencil, Charcoal

Mediterranean Landscape II
Located in London, GB
Mediterranean Landscape II', ink on art paper, by Pierre Dionisi (circa 1930s). Sepia-toned, original drawing in a compelling style depicts a view of a ...
Category

1930s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Ink

Marine Scene - Original Pencil Drawing - 20th Century
Located in Roma, IT
"Marine Scene" is an original drawing in pencil on paper, realized by an Anonymous French Artist of the XX Century . The state of preservation of the artwork is very good. Sheet di...
Category

20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pencil

Landscape with Bird - Original Pencil Drawing - 20th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Landscape and Bird is an original drawing in pencil on paper realized by an Anonymous artist of the XX century. The State of preservation is very good. Hand-signed on the lower ri...
Category

20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pencil

Avigdor Arikha Modernist Israeli Lithograph Jerusalem Landscape Bezalel School
Located in Surfside, FL
Hand signed in pencil and hand numbered lithograph on fine French Arches paper. Jerusalem Landscape. Avigdor Arikha (April 28, 1929 – April 29, 2010) was a Romanian-born French–Israeli painter, draughtsman, printmaker, and art historian. Avigdor Arikha (originally Victor Długacz) was born to German-speaking Jewish parents in Radauti, but grew up in Czernowitz in Bukovina, Romania (now in Ukraine). His family faced forced deportation in 1941 to the Romanian-run concentration camps of Transnistria, where his father died. He survived thanks to the drawings he made of deportation scenes, which were shown to delegates of the International Red Cross. Arikha immigrated to Palestine in 1944, together with his sister. Until 1948, he lived in Kibbutz Ma'ale HaHamisha. In 1948 he was severely wounded in Israel's War of Independence. From 1946 to 1949, he attended the Bezalel School of Art in Jerusalem. In 1949 he won a scholarship to study at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, where he learned the fresco technique. From 1954, Arikha resided in Paris. Arikha was married from 1961 until his death to the American poet and writer Anne Atik, with whom he had two daughters. In the late 1950s, Arikha established himself as an abstract painter, but he eventually came to think of abstraction as a dead end. In 1965 he stopped painting and began drawing, only from life, treating all subjects in a single sitting. He engaged in drawing and printmaking only for the next eight years. In 1973, he resumed painting and became "perhaps the best painter from life in the last decades of the 20th century", as he was hailed in an obituary in Economist magazine. Arikha painted directly from the subject in natural light only, using no preliminary drawing, finishing a painting, pastel, print, ink, or drawing in one session. His profound knowledge of art techniques and masterly draughtsmanship enabled him to abide by this principle of immediacy, partly inspired by Chinese brush painting. It was a principle he shared with his close friend Henri Cartier-Bresson, to whose "instant décisif" it was analogous. He never drew from memory or photographs, aiming to depict the truth of what lay before his eyes at that moment. He is noted for his portraits, nudes, still lifes, and landscapes, rendered realistically and spontaneously. In their radi...
Category

1970s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Lithograph

Landscape - Original Drawing - 1960s
Located in Roma, IT
Landscape "Eolie Island" in an original artwork in watercolor realized by the French artist André Ragot ( 1894-1971). Hand-signed by the artist on the low...
Category

1960s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

'China Cove, Corona del Mar', Southern California, Orange County beach scene
Located in Santa Cruz, CA
Signed lower right, 'Richard Soderman N.W.S', (American, 20th century), titled 'China Cove' and dated 1972. Richard Soderman began drawing at the age...
Category

1970s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor, Paper

Elegant Figures in Deckchairs with Boaters watercolour: Peter Collins ARCA
Located in London, GB
To see our other Modern British Art, and our other Peter Collins works, scroll down to "More from this Seller" and below it click on "See all from this Seller" - or send us a message...
Category

Mid-20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

Landscape - Original Pencil on Paper by Emile Deschler - 1987
Located in Roma, IT
Landscape is a beautiful drawing in pencil on paper realized in 1987 by Emile Deschler. Hand-signed and dated on the lower right. Good conditions. The artwork is depicted through ...
Category

1980s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pencil, Paper

Prof Sir Albert Richardson PRA Cottages 1962 Watercolour Drawing
Located in London, GB
To see our other architectural drawings, scroll down to "More from this Seller" and below it click on "See all from this Seller" - or send us a message if you cannot find the artist you want. Prof Sir Albert Richardson...
Category

Mid-20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

Boat in the sea - Original Tempera on Paper - 20th Century
Located in Roma, IT
"Boat in the sea" is an original tempera drawing on ivory-colorated paper by Anonymous Artist of XX Century. In very good conditions. Sheet dimension: 25 x 33.6 cm. This is an or...
Category

20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Tempera

Prof Sir Albert Richardson PRA Verneuil 1954 Watercolour Architectural drawing
Located in London, GB
To see our other architectural drawings, scroll down to "More from this Seller" and below it click on "See all from this Seller" - or send us a message if you cannot find the artist ...
Category

Mid-20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

Animal Grazing - 1950s - Oskar Kokoschka - Modern Art
Located in Roma, IT
This beautiful drawing is hand-signed and dated. Image Dimensions : 14 x 22.5cm
Category

1950s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Color Pencil

St. Gregory in Rome - Original Ink and Watercolor by J. P. Verdussen - 1741
Located in Roma, IT
St. Gregory in Rome is a beautiful artwork realized by Jan Peter Verdussen in 1741. Ink and watercolour on brown paper. In very good codition. Dated on the lower margin. The origin...
Category

1740s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Ink, Watercolor

Handsome Couple in Sailboat - Collier's Magazine Illustration
Located in Miami, FL
Collier's Magazine Illustration From the Estate of Charles Martignette. Work is framed in a period wood frame Watercolor on board
Category

1940s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Board, Watercolor

Castle - Drawing in Pencil on Paper - 20th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Castle is an original drawing in pencil on paper realized by an Anonymous artist of the XX century, with descriptions on some parts of the castle in pencil. The State of preservati...
Category

20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pencil

Landscape - Original Pencil on Paper - 19th Century
Located in Roma, IT
"Landscape" is an original pencil drawing on ivory paper by Anonymous Artist of 19th Century. In excellent conditions: As good as new. Not signed.
Category

19th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pencil

Alpine Landscape - Original Pencil Drawing by Marie Hector Yvert - 19th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Alpine Landscape is an original artwork realized in the second half of the 19th Century by Marie Hector Yvert. Original pencil and white chalk on brown paper. Stamp of Atelier M.H....
Category

Late 20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Chalk, Pencil

Cottage - Original Drawing in Pencil on Paper - 20th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Cottage is an original drawing in pencil on paper realized by an Anonymous artist of the XX century. With a drawing of a horse's head on the rear. The State of preservation is good ...
Category

20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pencil

View of the Forum Romanum - Watercolor by Giuseppe Costantini - 1870s
Located in Roma, IT
View of the Forum Romanum is an original modern artwork realized by the Italian painter Giuseppe Costantini (Nola, 1843 - Naples, 1893) in the seco...
Category

1870s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Oil, Watercolor

Claude Muncaster South Cerney Gloucestershire The Old George Inn Watercolour
Located in London, GB
We acquired a series of paintings from Claude Muncaster's studio. To find more scroll down to "More from this Seller" and below it click on "See all from this seller." Claude Muncaster (1903-1974) The Old George Inn, South Cerney, Gloucestershire Dated October 1952 to reverse Signed lower left and further signed to reverse Pencil and Watercolour 20x30cm Muncaster's watercolours capture the English countryside feel with great competence. Here, the Old George Inn (which still exists, though in less splendid isolation) is captured charmingly. Claude Grahame Muncaster, RWS, ROI, RBA, SMA was the son of Oliver Hall RA. At the age of fifteen his career as a landscape painter began, and he soon took to the seas, spending the 1920s and 30s travelling the world with his sketchbook in a series of vessels. With the outbreak of war and he joined the RNVR training as a navigator. Having left school at fifteen his mathematics was very weak and it was a relief for all when his artistic talents meant he was recruited as a camofleur. A master of capturing seascapes he was therefore able to hide huge ships ‘in plain sight’ with clever disguises. After the war he painted for the Royal Family and was a frequent guest at Sandringham. Claude Muncaster was a watercolourist known for his landscapes and maritime scenes. He was born Grahame Hall, the son of the Royal Academician Oliver Hall who taught his son to paint from an early age; Grahame first exhibited his work aged 15 and a few years later was showing at the RA. However, he adopted the name Claude Muncaster in 1922 to dissociate his career from that of his father. Muncaster’s primary choice of subject matter came from a genuine love of the sea. He made several long-distance sea voyages, including one around the Horn...
Category

Mid-20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

Moulin Rouge - China Ink on Paper - 20th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Moulin Rouge is an original drawing in China ink on paper realized by an unknown artist of the XX century. The State of preservation is very goo...
Category

20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, India Ink

William Jacobs "A Stroll in the Park", original pastel on paper
Located in Glenview, IL
"A Stroll in the Park" by noted Chicago painter William Jacobs (1897 - 1973) is a pastel on paper created in 1970. The artwork is signed and dated i...
Category

1970s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pastel

'Gloucester' — Mid-Century Modernist Watercolor
Located in Myrtle Beach, SC
Nathaniel Dirk, Untitled (Gloucester), watercolor, with fresh colors, on watercolor paper; in fine, original condition, with the artist's tack holes (barely visible) at the sheet edg...
Category

Mid-20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

'Victoria Peak, Hong Kong'
Located in Santa Cruz, CA
Signed lower center, 'Geo Marzan' and painted circa 1965. Panoramic sunset view of Causeway Bay, Hong Kong, with numerous fishing vessels and pleasure boats, and Victoria Peak risin...
Category

1960s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor, Paper

Avigdor Arikha Modernist Israeli Lithograph Jerusalem Landscape Bezalel School
Located in Surfside, FL
Hand signed in pencil and hand numbered lithograph on fine French Arches paper. Jerusalem Landscape. Avigdor Arikha (April 28, 1929 – April 29, 2010) was a Romanian-born French–Israeli painter, draughtsman, printmaker, and art historian. Avigdor Arikha (originally Victor Długacz) was born to German-speaking Jewish parents in Radauti, but grew up in Czernowitz in Bukovina, Romania (now in Ukraine). His family faced forced deportation in 1941 to the Romanian-run concentration camps of Transnistria, where his father died. He survived thanks to the drawings he made of deportation scenes, which were shown to delegates of the International Red Cross. Arikha immigrated to Palestine in 1944, together with his sister. Until 1948, he lived in Kibbutz Ma'ale HaHamisha. In 1948 he was severely wounded in Israel's War of Independence. From 1946 to 1949, he attended the Bezalel School of Art in Jerusalem. In 1949 he won a scholarship to study at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, where he learned the fresco technique. From 1954, Arikha resided in Paris. Arikha was married from 1961 until his death to the American poet and writer Anne Atik, with whom he had two daughters. In the late 1950s, Arikha established himself as an abstract painter, but he eventually came to think of abstraction as a dead end. In 1965 he stopped painting and began drawing, only from life, treating all subjects in a single sitting. He engaged in drawing and printmaking only for the next eight years. In 1973, he resumed painting and became "perhaps the best painter from life in the last decades of the 20th century", as he was hailed in an obituary in Economist magazine. Arikha painted directly from the subject in natural light only, using no preliminary drawing, finishing a painting, pastel, print, ink, or drawing in one session. His profound knowledge of art techniques and masterly draughtsmanship enabled him to abide by this principle of immediacy, partly inspired by Chinese brush painting. It was a principle he shared with his close friend Henri Cartier-Bresson, to whose "instant décisif" it was analogous. He never drew from memory or photographs, aiming to depict the truth of what lay before his eyes at that moment. He is noted for his portraits, nudes, still lifes, and landscapes, rendered realistically and spontaneously. In their radi...
Category

1970s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Lithograph

Reginald Marsh "Brooklyn Bridge" NYC Modernism WPA Mid-Century Watercolor Modern
Located in New York, NY
Reginald Marsh "Brooklyn Bridge" NYC Modernism WPA Mid-Century Watercolor Modern Reginald Marsh (American, 1898-1954) Brooklyn Bridge, 1940, Signed and dated Reginald Marsh May 1940 (lr), Watercolor over traces of pencil on paper , 15 x 22 inches sight. Reginald Marsh was born in Paris, France in 1898, the child of artist parents. He was born over a small cafe on Paris' Left Bank. He was brought to the United States in 1900 and was drawing before he was three. He studied art at Yale University and the Art Students League, during which time he worked primarily as an illustrator for New York newspapers and magazines. After studying in Paris in 1925 and 1926, he turned seriously to painting. In 1929 he was introduced to the egg-tempera medium, which he used extensively the rest of his life. Marsh's gusto for painting the bottom crust of society contrasted curiously with his background. His parents, both well-known artists, were steeped in academic traditions. He attended Lawrenceville Academy and Yale; perhaps this elite background made it possible to paint the earthy people he did with a journalist's objectivity. An admirer of Rubens and Delacroix, he disliked modernist art; indeed, his lifelong preoccupation was with people - enjoying themselves at beaches, at amusement parks, or on crowded city streets. Marsh was a second-generation Ash Can School painter and printmaker, best known as an urban regionalist. He spent his days sketching in small notebooks...
Category

1940s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Watercolor

Claude Muncaster Clare College and River Cam Cambridge Watercolour
Located in London, GB
We acquired a series of paintings from Claude Muncaster's studio. To find more scroll down to "More from this Seller" and below it click on "See all from this seller." Claude Muncaster (1903-1974) Clare College Cambridge and River Cam...
Category

Mid-20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

Paris Landscape - Original Drawing on Paper - 20th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Paris Landscape is an original drawing in China ink and marker on paper realized by an Anonymous artist of the XX century. The State of preservation is very good and aged. Sheet d...
Category

20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Ink, Permanent Marker

"Grain Elevators, Buffalo"
Located in Lambertville, NJ
Jim’s of Lambertville is proud to offer this artwork by: Tobias Musicant (1921 – 2004) A new discovery in the art world is something always searched for and rarely found. Surely th...
Category

1930s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor, Paper, Ink

Landscape, Acrylic on Canvas, Blue, Green, Brown, Bengal Master Artist"In Stock"
Located in Kolkata, West Bengal
Prakash Karmakar – Landscape – 36 x 57 inches (unframed size) Acrylic on Canvas Signed lower right in Bengali Inclusive of shipment in roll form. Karmakar is best know...
Category

1990s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Barberini Square, Roma - Original Watercolor - 19th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Barberini Square is an original painting in watercolor realized by an Italian Anonymous artist of the 19th Century. In good conditions. Light, and brilliant landscape of the fount...
Category

19th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

Green Landscape, Watercolor and Ink on Paper, circa 1926
Located in Doylestown, PA
"Green Landscape" by Philadelphia born modernist and surrealist painter Leon Kelly, is a framed and matted landscape painting. The 17.5" x 23.5" watercolor and ink on paper is signed...
Category

1920s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Archival Ink, Watercolor, Archival Paper

William Jacobs "Urban Scene", original pastel on paper
Located in Glenview, IL
"Urban Scene" by noted Chicago painter William Jacobs (1897 - 1973) is a pastel on paper created in 1970. The artwork is signed in pencil by the artist and...
Category

1970s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pastel

Landscape - Pencil on Paper by J. P. Verdussen - 18th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Landscape is an original drawing is realized by Jan Peter Verdussen. The artwork has some folds and foxings and is repaired on the middle line. The artwork represents a landscape. ...
Category

18th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pencil

Figures in the Landscape - Original Pen by B. Mogniat-Duclos - Mid 20th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Figures in the Landscape is an original Contemporary artwork realized by the French artist Bertrand Mogniat-Duclos (Sedan, 1903 - 1987) in the half of the XX Century. Original pen d...
Category

Mid-20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pen

Town Scene: Peter Collins ARCA pen and ink sketch Modern British Art
Located in London, GB
To see our other Modern British Art, and our other Peter Collins works, scroll down to "More from this Seller" and below it click on "See all from this Seller" - or send us a message...
Category

1960s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Ink

Landscape - Original Drawing on Paper - Mid-19th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Landscape is an original Modern Artwork realized in France in the half of the XIX Century. Original Drawing on Paper. Pencil and white lead. Very good conditions. The work, rea...
Category

1850s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pencil

Architectural Design Original Ink and Watercolor on Cardboard-Early 20th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Architectural design is an original painting in ink and watercolor on cardboard by Anonymous french Artist in the early 20th Century. Good conditions except for being aged and repai...
Category

Early 20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Ink, Watercolor

Study for Old Canal, Red and Blue (Rockaway, Morris Canal)
Located in New York, NY
Oscar Bluemner was a German and an American, a trained architect who read voraciously in art theory, color theory, and philosophy, a writer of art criticism both in German and English, and, above all, a practicing artist. Bluemner was an intense man, who sought to express and share, through drawing and painting, universal emotional experience. Undergirded by theory, Bluemner chose color and line for his vehicles; but color especially became the focus of his passion. He was neither abstract artist nor realist, but employed the “expressional use of real phenomena” to pursue his ends. (Oscar Bluemner, from unpublished typescript on “Modern Art” for Camera Work, in Bluemner papers, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, as cited and quoted in Jeffrey R. Hayes, Oscar Bluemner [1991], p. 60. The Bluemner papers in the Archives [hereafter abbreviated as AAA] are the primary source for Bluemner scholars. Jeffrey Hayes read them thoroughly and translated key passages for his doctoral dissertation, Oscar Bluemner: Life, Art, and Theory [University of Maryland, 1982; UMI reprint, 1982], which remains the most comprehensive source on Bluemner. In 1991, Hayes published a monographic study of Bluemner digested from his dissertation and, in 2005, contributed a brief essay to the gallery show at Barbara Mathes, op. cit.. The most recent, accessible, and comprehensive view of Bluemner is the richly illustrated, Barbara Haskell, Oscar Bluemner: A Passion for Color, exhib. cat. [New York: Whitney Museum of American Art, 2005.]) Bluemner was born in the industrial city of Prenzlau, Prussia, the son and grandson of builders and artisans. He followed the family predilection and studied architecture, receiving a traditional and thorough German training. He was a prize-winning student and appeared to be on his way to a successful career when he decided, in 1892, to emigrate to America, drawn perhaps by the prospect of immediate architectural opportunities at the Chicago World’s Fair, but, more importantly, seeking a freedom of expression and an expansiveness that he believed he would find in the New World. The course of Bluemner’s American career proved uneven. He did indeed work as an architect in Chicago, but left there distressed at the formulaic quality of what he was paid to do. Plagued by periods of unemployment, he lived variously in Chicago, New York, and Boston. At one especially low point, he pawned his coat and drafting tools and lived in a Bowery flophouse, selling calendars on the streets of New York and begging for stale bread. In Boston, he almost decided to return home to Germany, but was deterred partly because he could not afford the fare for passage. He changed plans and direction again, heading for Chicago, where he married Lina Schumm, a second-generation German-American from Wisconsin. Their first child, Paul Robert, was born in 1897. In 1899, Bluemner became an American citizen. They moved to New York City where, until 1912, Bluemner worked as an architect and draftsman to support his family, which also included a daughter, Ella Vera, born in 1903. All the while, Oscar Bluemner was attracted to the freer possibilities of art. He spent weekends roaming Manhattan’s rural margins, visiting the Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens, and New Jersey, sketching landscapes in hundreds of small conté crayon drawings. Unlike so many city-based artists, Bluemner did not venture out in search of pristine countryside or unspoiled nature. As he wrote in 1932, in an unsuccessful application for a Guggenheim Fellowship, “I prefer the intimate landscape of our common surroundings, where town and country mingle. For we are in the habit to carry into them our feelings of pain and pleasure, our moods” (as quoted by Joyce E. Brodsky in “Oscar Bluemner in Black and White,” p. 4, in Bulletin 1977, I, no. 5, The William Benton Museum of Art, Storrs, Connecticut). By 1911, Bluemner had found a powerful muse in a series of old industrial towns, mostly in New Jersey, strung along the route of the Morris Canal. While he educated himself at museums and art galleries, Bluemner entered numerous architectural competitions. In 1903, in partnership with Michael Garven, he designed a new courthouse for Bronx County. Garven, who had ties to Tammany Hall, attempted to exclude Bluemner from financial or artistic credit, but Bluemner promptly sued, and, finally, in 1911, after numerous appeals, won a $7,000 judgment. Barbara Haskell’s recent catalogue reveals more details of Bluemner’s architectural career than have previously been known. Bluemner the architect was also married with a wife and two children. He took what work he could get and had little pride in what he produced, a galling situation for a passionate idealist, and the undoubted explanation for why he later destroyed the bulk of his records for these years. Beginning in 1907, Bluemner maintained a diary, his “Own Principles of Painting,” where he refined his ideas and incorporated insights from his extensive reading in philosophy and criticism both in English and German to create a theoretical basis for his art. Sometime between 1908 and 1910, Bluemner’s life as an artist was transformed by his encounter with the German-educated Alfred Stieglitz, proprietor of the Little Galleries of the Photo-Secession at 291 Fifth Avenue. The two men were kindred Teutonic souls. Bluemner met Stieglitz at about the time that Stieglitz was shifting his serious attention away from photography and toward contemporary art in a modernist idiom. Stieglitz encouraged and presided over Bluemner’s transition from architect to painter. During the same period elements of Bluemner’s study of art began to coalesce into a personal vision. A Van Gogh show in 1908 convinced Bluemner that color could be liberated from the constraints of naturalism. In 1911, Bluemner visited a Cézanne watercolor show at Stieglitz’s gallery and saw, in Cézanne’s formal experiments, a path for uniting Van Gogh’s expressionist use of color with a reality-based but non-objective language of form. A definitive change of course in Bluemner’s professional life came in 1912. Ironically, it was the proceeds from his successful suit to gain credit for his architectural work that enabled Bluemner to commit to painting as a profession. Dividing the judgment money to provide for the adequate support of his wife and two children, he took what remained and financed a trip to Europe. Bluemner traveled across the Continent and England, seeing as much art as possible along the way, and always working at a feverish pace. He took some of his already-completed work with him on his European trip, and arranged his first-ever solo exhibitions in Berlin, Leipzig, and Elberfeld, Germany. After Bluemner returned from his study trip, he was a painter, and would henceforth return to drafting only as a last-ditch expedient to support his family when his art failed to generate sufficient income. Bluemner became part of the circle of Stieglitz artists at “291,” a group which included Marsden Hartley, John Marin, and Arthur Dove. He returned to New York in time to show five paintings at the 1913 Armory Show and began, as well, to publish critical and theoretical essays in Stieglitz’s journal, Camera Work. In its pages he cogently defended the Armory Show against the onslaught of conservative attacks. In 1915, under Stieglitz’s auspices, Bluemner had his first American one-man show at “291.” Bluemner’s work offers an interesting contrast with that of another Stieglitz architect-turned-artist, John Marin, who also had New Jersey connections. The years after 1914 were increasingly uncomfortable. Bluemner remained, all of his life, proud of his German cultural legacy, contributing regularly to German language journals and newspapers in this country. The anti-German sentiment, indeed mania, before and during World War I, made life difficult for the artist and his family. It is impossible to escape the political agenda in Charles Caffin’s critique of Bluemner’s 1915 show. Caffin found in Bluemner’s precise and earnest explorations of form, “drilled, regimented, coerced . . . formations . . . utterly alien to the American idea of democracy” (New York American, reprinted in Camera Work, no. 48 [Oct. 1916], as quoted in Hayes, 1991, p. 71). In 1916, seeking a change of scene, more freedom to paint, and lower expenses, Bluemner moved his family to New Jersey, familiar terrain from his earlier sketching and painting. During the ten years they lived in New Jersey, the Bluemner family moved around the state, usually, but not always, one step ahead of the rent collector. In 1917, Stieglitz closed “291” and did not reestablish a Manhattan gallery until 1925. In the interim, Bluemner developed relationships with other dealers and with patrons. Throughout his career he drew support and encouragement from art cognoscenti who recognized his talent and the high quality of his work. Unfortunately, that did not pay the bills. Chronic shortfalls were aggravated by Bluemner’s inability to sustain supportive relationships. He was a difficult man, eternally bitter at the gap between the ideal and the real. Hard on himself and hard on those around him, he ultimately always found a reason to bite the hand that fed him. Bluemner never achieved financial stability. He left New Jersey in 1926, after the death of his beloved wife, and settled in South Braintree, Massachusetts, outside of Boston, where he continued to paint until his own death in 1938. As late as 1934 and again in 1936, he worked for New Deal art programs designed to support struggling artists. Bluemner held popular taste and mass culture in contempt, and there was certainly no room in his quasi-religious approach to art for accommodation to any perceived commercial advantage. His German background was also problematic, not only for its political disadvantages, but because, in a world where art is understood in terms of national styles, Bluemner was sui generis, and, to this day, lacks a comfortable context. In 1933, Bluemner adopted Florianus (definitively revising his birth names, Friedrich Julius Oskar) as his middle name and incorporated it into his signature, to present “a Latin version of his own surname that he believed reinforced his career-long effort to translate ordinary perceptions into the more timeless and universal languages of art” (Hayes 1982, p. 189 n. 1). In 1939, critic Paul Rosenfeld, a friend and member of the Stieglitz circle, responding to the difficulty in categorizing Bluemner, perceptively located him among “the ranks of the pre-Nazi German moderns” (Hayes 1991, p. 41). Bluemner was powerfully influenced in his career by the intellectual heritage of two towering figures of nineteenth-century German culture, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel. A keen student of color theory, Bluemner gave pride of place to the formulations of Goethe, who equated specific colors with emotional properties. In a November 19, 1915, interview in the German-language newspaper, New Yorker Staats-Zeitung (Abendblatt), he stated: I comprehend the visible world . . . abstract the primary-artistic . . . and after these elements of realty are extracted and analyzed, I reconstruct a new free creation that still resembles the original, but also . . . becomes an objectification of the abstract idea of beauty. The first—and most conspicuous mark of this creation is . . . colors which accord with the character of things, the locality . . . [and which] like the colors of Cranach, van der Weyden, or Durer, are of absolute purity, breadth, and luminosity. . . . I proceed from the psychological use of color by the Old Masters . . . [in which] we immediately recognize colors as carriers of “sorrow and joy” in Goethe’s sense, or as signs of human relationship. . . . Upon this color symbolism rests the beauty as well as the expressiveness, of earlier sacred paintings. Above all, I recognize myself as a contributor to the new German theory of light and color, which expands Goethe’s law of color through modern scientific means (as quoted in Hayes 1991, p. 71). Hayes has traced the global extent of Bluemner’s intellectual indebtedness to Hegel (1991, pp. 36–37). More specifically, Bluemner made visual, in his art, the Hegelian world view, in the thesis and antithesis of the straight line and the curve, the red and the green, the vertical and the horizontal, the agitation and the calm. Bluemner respected all of these elements equally, painting and drawing the tension and dynamic of the dialectic and seeking ultimate reconciliation in a final visual synthesis. Bluemner was a keen student of art, past and present, looking, dissecting, and digesting all that he saw. He found precedents for his non-naturalist use of brilliant-hued color not only in the work Van Gogh and Cezanne, but also in Gauguin, the Nabis, and the Symbolists, as well as among his contemporaries, the young Germans of Der Blaue Reiter. Bluemner was accustomed to working to the absolute standard of precision required of the architectural draftsman, who adjusts a design many times until its reality incorporates both practical imperatives and aesthetic intentions. Hayes describes Bluemner’s working method, explaining how the artist produced multiple images playing on the same theme—in sketch form, in charcoal, and in watercolor, leading to the oil works that express the ultimate completion of his process (Hayes, 1982, pp. 156–61, including relevant footnotes). Because of Bluemner’s working method, driven not only by visual considerations but also by theoretical constructs, his watercolor and charcoal studies have a unique integrity. They are not, as is sometimes the case with other artists, rough preparatory sketches. They stand on their own, unfinished only in the sense of not finally achieving Bluemner’s carefully considered purpose. The present charcoal drawing is one of a series of images that take as their starting point the Morris Canal as it passed through Rockaway, New Jersey. The Morris Canal industrial towns that Bluemner chose as the points of departure for his early artistic explorations in oil included Paterson with its silk mills (which recalled the mills in the artist’s childhood home in Elberfeld), the port city of Hoboken, Newark, and, more curiously, a series of iron ore mining and refining towns, in the north central part of the state that pre-dated the Canal, harkening back to the era of the Revolutionary War. The Rockaway theme was among the original group of oil paintings that Bluemner painted in six productive months from July through December 1911 and took with him to Europe in 1912. In his painting journal, Bluemner called this work Morris Canal at Rockaway N.J. (AAA, reel 339, frames 150 and 667, Hayes, 1982, pp. 116–17), and exhibited it at the Galerie Fritz Gurlitt in Berlin in 1912 as Rockaway N. J. Alter Kanal. After his return, Bluemner scraped down and reworked these canvases. The Rockaway picture survives today, revised between 1914 and 1922, as Old Canal, Red and Blue (Rockaway River) in the collection of the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Washington D. C. (color illus. in Haskell, fig. 48, p. 65). For Bluemner, the charcoal expression of his artistic vision was a critical step in composition. It represented his own adaptation of Arthur Wesley’s Dow’s (1857–1922) description of a Japanese...
Category

20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Charcoal

Gate - Original Drawing in Pencil on Paper Realized - 20th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Gate is an original drawing in pencil on paper realized by an Anonymous artist of the XX century. The State of preservation is very good with some foldings on the margins. Sheet d...
Category

20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pencil

Mediterranean Landscape
Located in London, GB
'Mediterranean Landscape', ink on art paper, by Pierre Dionisi (circa 1930s). Sepia-toned, original drawing in a compelling style depicts a view of Prov...
Category

1930s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Ink

Landscape - Pencil on Paper by Jan Peter Verdussen - Mid-18th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Landscape is a beautiful drawing in pencil on paper realized by Jan Peter Verdussen. In aged condition; with diffused stains and rips plus a small hole. The artwork represents a tr...
Category

Mid-19th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pencil

'Hong Kong from Victoria Harbor', Society of Western Artists, Bohemian Club
Located in Santa Cruz, CA
Signed lower right, 'W.M. Knowles for William Howard Knowles (American, 1909-1998), titled, 'Hong Kong' and painted circa 1965. Born in San Francisco, William Knowles studied at the Masachussets Institute of Technology and, later, at UC Berkeley. He exhibited widely and with success and was a member of the Society of Western Artists, Bohemian Club...
Category

1960s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Watercolor

Hermann Kauschke: Alpspitze, Zugspitze u. Waxenstein - Alpine watercolour 1938
By Hermann Kausche
Located in London, GB
Hermann Kauschke Alpspitze, Zugspitze u. Waxenstein Alpine watercolour 1938 14.5x19.5cm Inscribed "Alpspitze, Zugspitze u. Waxenstein - original Aquarell" Signed and Dated Here t...
Category

1930s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

Woman in Nature - Original Drawing by Ferdinand Lemud - 19th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Woman in nature is an original drawing in black point on paper, realized by Ferdinand Lemud. Good conditions except for minor cosmetic wear. Image Dimensions: 9.9 x 9.6 cm This art...
Category

19th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Ink, Paper

Venice Landscape - Ink and Watercolor - 18th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Venice Landscape is an original, splendid drawing in pen and watercolor realized by an Anonymous Venetian School, XVIII century. The state of preserva...
Category

18th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Ink, Watercolor

Obelisk - Original Pencil Drawing by Herta Hausmann - Mid-20th Century
Located in Roma, IT
"Obelisk" is an original pencil drawing on ivory-colorated cardboard by Herta Hausmann. In excellent conditions: As good as new. Not signed.
Category

Mid-20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pencil

Sole Tree - Drawing in Pencil on Paper - 20th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Sole Tree is an original drawing in pencil on paper realized by an Anonymous artist of the XX century. The State of preservation is very good with the traces of time and some small...
Category

20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pencil

Paris Landscape - Drawing on Paper - 20th Century
Located in Roma, IT
Paris Landscape is an original drawing in China ink and marker on paper realized by an Anonymous artist of the XX century. The State of preservation is very good and aged. Sheet d...
Category

20th Century Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Ink, Permanent Marker

Mary Fedden 1970 watercolour Moonlight at Cappadocia Modern British Art
By Mary Fedden
Located in London, GB
To see our other Modern British Art, scroll down to "More from this Seller" and below it click on "See all from this Seller" - or send us a message if you cannot find the artist you want. Mary Fedden (1915-2012) Moonlight at Cappadocia Watercolour 18 x 13 cm Signed and dated lower left Lonely Planet...
Category

1970s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

'Fishermen at Monterey Wharf'
Located in Santa Cruz, CA
Signed lower right, 'Katherine Wengi' for Katherine Wengi O'Connor (American, 1936-1984); additionally inscribed verso with artist information. This listed Oregon artist was a membe...
Category

1960s Modern Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Watercolor, Gouache

Modern landscape drawings and watercolors for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Modern landscape drawings and watercolors available for sale on 1stDibs. Works in this style were very popular during the 21st Century and Contemporary, but contemporary artists have continued to produce works inspired by this movement. If you’re looking to add landscape drawings and watercolors created in this style to introduce contrast in an otherwise neutral space in your home, the works available on 1stDibs include elements of blue, orange, green, purple and other colors. Many Pop art paintings were created by popular artists on 1stDibs, including Bernard Labbe, Peter Collins ARCA, Albert Richardson, and Sue Bryan. Frequently made by artists working with Paint, and Watercolor and other materials, all of these pieces for sale are unique and have attracted attention over the years. Not every interior allows for large Modern landscape drawings and watercolors, so small editions measuring 2.37 inches across are also available. Prices for landscape drawings and watercolors made by famous or emerging artists can differ depending on medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $55 and tops out at $950,000, while the average work sells for $650.

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