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Mid 20th Century Gouache - Italian Street Scene

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  • Jane Davies - 2001 Gouache, Italian Landscape
    Located in Corsham, GB
    A charming gouache painting with watercolour and pastel by the artist Jane Davies, depicting an Italian landscape. Signed and dated to the lower right-hand...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

    Materials

    Gouache

  • Framed Mid 20th Century Gouache - Returning Home
    Located in Corsham, GB
    Subtle impastoes are combined with a dry brush technique to render a cosy study of a country cottage in the late evening to brilliant effect. The artwork is unsigned and well represe...
    Category

    20th Century Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

    Materials

    Gouache

  • Framed Mid 20th Century Gouache - Cosy Cottage
    Located in Corsham, GB
    Subtle impastoed depict a tranquil study of a rural cottage. The artwork is unsigned and well presented in a gilded wood frame with a blue and white double mount. On wove.
    Category

    20th Century Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

    Materials

    Gouache

  • Claude Honorà Hugrel (1880-1944) - Large Signed 1926 Gouache, French Shepherdes
    Located in Corsham, GB
    A stunning signed French pastoral view by the acclaimed French artist Claude Honoré Hugrel (1880-1944), depicting a shepherdess driving her flock along a country lane. The artist ha...
    Category

    20th Century Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

    Materials

    Gouache

  • Ken Longcake - Mid 20th Century Gouache, Abstract Figure in Blue
    Located in Corsham, GB
    Unsigned. On wove.
    Category

    20th Century Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

    Materials

    Gouache

  • Rowland Suddaby (1912-1972) - Signed Gouache, Pen & Ink, Coastline Mountains
    By Rowland Suddaby
    Located in Corsham, GB
    A superb mid 20th century painting by the highly acclaimed British artist Rowland Suddaby, depicting a dramatic coastline. Suddaby has captured the intensity of this jagged landscape through the use of hurried brushwork - indicating that this was painted en plein air. Further shadow and details have been added in black ink - again the mark making is energetic and instinctive, as Suddaby tries to capture the scene before the light changes. Multi hued clouds on the horizon suggest an approaching storm rolling off the sea. The painting is stamped to the lower right and excellently presented in a cream card mount and decorative gilt frame. Provenance: Ex collection of the artist's widow Elizabeth. This piece is accompanied by a letter of authenticity from Grant M...
    Category

    20th Century Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

    Materials

    Gouache

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  • "New England Landscape, " James Grabowski, View of Connecticut Hills in the Sun
    Located in New York, NY
    James L. Grabowski (American born 1944) New England Landscape Gouache on paper 27 1/2 x 39 1/2 Signed on the reverse Has a plaque for Arches Paper Award James Grabowski...
    Category

    Late 20th Century Contemporary Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

    Materials

    Gouache, Paper

  • 1854 Funeral of R. Williams at Gyokusen-ji Temple, Shimoda, with Commodore Perry
    Located in Amsterdam, NL
    Wilhelm Heine (Dresden 30 January 1827-Löbnitz 5 October 1885) ‘Funeral of Robert Williams in the cemetery of the Temple Gyokusen-ji at Shimoda in April 1854’ With a sticker on the reverse of the frame by Coupil & Co. 1855 Watercolour on paper, H. 57 x W. 92 cm Depicted is the Bay of Shimoda with seven American ships including the two paddle-wheel warships USS Mississippi and Susquehanna. On the Gyokus- en-ji temple grounds on the right is the coffin in the middle with the remains of US marine Robert Williams, ready to be lowered into the grave. Looking on from the left are the Buddhist monks and Japanese officials who joined the first Christian funeral on Japanese soil. Around the grave are US marines, Commodore Perry...
    Category

    Mid-19th Century Figurative Drawings and Watercolors

    Materials

    Paper, Ink, Watercolor, Gouache

  • Church of Saint-Etienne-Du-Mont, Paris
    Located in Genève, GE
    Work on watercolor paper Gray wooden frame with glass pane 94 x 73 x 3 cm
    Category

    1940s Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

    Materials

    Watercolor, Gouache

  • Edam, Holland
    By Thomas Fransioli
    Located in New York, NY
    Thomas Fransioli’s cityscapes are crisp and tidy. Buildings stand in bold outline, their forms squarely defined by stark light and long shadows. Saturated color permeates every corner of his canvases, from vibrant oranges and greens to smoky terra cottas and granites. Even the trees that line Fransioli’s streets, parks, and squares are sharp and angular, exactly like those in an architect’s elevation rendering. But Fransioli’s cities often lack one critical feature: people. His streets are largely deserted, save for parked cars and an occasional black cat scurrying across the pavement. People make rare appearances in Fransioli’s compositions, and never does the entropy of a crowd overwhelm their prevailing sense of order and precision. People are implied in a Fransioli painting, but their physical presence would detract from the scene’s bleak and surreal beauty. Magic Realism neatly characterizes Fransioli’s artistic viewpoint. The term was first broadly applied to contemporary American art in the 1943 Museum of Modern Art exhibition, American Realists and Magic Realists. As exhibition curator Dorothy Miller noted in her foreword to the catalogue, Magic Realism was a “widespread but not yet generally recognized trend in contemporary American art…. It is limited, in the main, to pictures of sharp focus and precise representation, whether the subject has been observed in the outer world—realism, or contrived by the imagination—magic realism.” In his introductory essay, Lincoln Kirstein took the concept a step further: “Magic realists try to convince us that extraordinary things are possible simply by painting them as if they existed.” This is Fransioli, in a nutshell. His cityscapes exist in time and space, but certainly not in the manner in which he portrays them. Fransioli—and other Magic Realists of his time—was also the heir to Precisionism, spawned from Cubism and Futurism after the Great War and popularized in the 1920s and early 1930s. While Fransioli may not have aspired to celebrate the Machine Age, heavy industry, and skyscrapers in the same manner as Charles Sheeler, his compositions tap into the same rigid gridwork of the urban landscape that was first codified by the Precisionists. During the 1950s, Fransioli was represented by the progressive Margaret Brown...
    Category

    20th Century American Realist Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

    Materials

    Paper, Gouache

  • Tourists Viewing the Temple of Karnak, Egypt
    By Eleanor Parke Custis
    Located in New York, NY
    Eleanor Park Custis painted scenes as varied as the artist's travels: from her hometown of Washington, D.C., to the coastal towns of New England; from the prosperous fishing villages of Brittany, to Venice and the mountain villages and lakes of northern Italy. While Custis's subjects are diverse, her style is consistent and distinctive throughout this body of work. Her use of flat areas of color delineated by dark contours is reminiscent of the aesthetics of woodblock printing. Like many artists of the day, she was profoundly influenced by Japanese woodblock prints, and her adaptation of the aesthetic by 1924 led to her most productive artistic period. Eleanor Custis hailed from a socially prominent Washington, D.C., family. She was distantly related to Martha Custis Washington, America's first First Lady. Custis began three years of formal art training in the autumn of 1915 at the Corcoran School of Art in Washington, and was guided and inspired by Impressionist artist Edmund C. Tarbell, one of the Ten American Painters, who became the Corcoran School's principal in 1918. Custis exhibited widely in many of the Washington art societies and clubs for much of her career. She was also a frequent exhibitor at the Grand Central Art Galleries in New York City; her last one-woman show there was in April 1945. Custis's mature style emerged in scenes of the streets, wharves, and drydocks of seacoast villages from Maine to Massachusetts, which she visited during the summers of 1924 and 1925. She was working in Gloucester, Massachusetts in August 1924, and painted several gouaches of the town's wharves and winding streets, including In Gloucester Harbor and At the Drydock, Gloucester. During her stay, Custis may have met Jane Peterson or at least must have seen her work, the best of which was executed in Gloucester during the preceding ten years. The similarity between their styles is unmistakable, but, while it may be tempting to suggest that Custis was influenced by Peterson during her summer in Gloucester, the connection between their work is probably more a case of shared aesthetics and common European influences. Custis expanded her subject repertoire with three trips to Europe between 1926 and 1929, and was inspired by the Old World charm of Holland, northern France, Switzerland, and Italy, leading to such works as New Kirk, Delft, Holland, Market Day in Quimper, At the Foot of the Matterhorn, and The Town Square, Varenna. A Mediterranean cruise in 1934 introduced her to the Near East, and the bustling, colorful streets and bazaars of Cairo, captured in works like A Street in Cairo, Egypt and A Moroccan Jug...
    Category

    20th Century American Realist Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

    Materials

    Paper, Gouache

  • Tree and Fence, East Hartford, Connecticut (New England Landscape)
    By Charles De Wolf Brownell
    Located in New York, NY
    Watercolor and gouache on paper
    Category

    Mid-19th Century American Realist Landscape Drawings and Watercolors

    Materials

    Watercolor, Gouache

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