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Art by Medium: Plexiglass

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Medium: Plexiglass
"Abstract Composition IX" in Mustard Orange Green Cream Modern Art Spots
Located in Brooklyn, NY
"Abstract Composition IX" by James Chadwick is from his series that takes from vintage patterning, zooming in to see the abstraction of the detail which largely goes unnoticed. Inspi...
Category

2010s Abstract Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Paper

"Abstract Composition V" in Orange Turquoise Blue Yellow Modern Art Spots
Located in Brooklyn, NY
"Abstract Composition V" by James Chadwick is from his series that takes from vintage patterning, zooming in to see the abstraction of the detail which ...
Category

2010s Abstract Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Paper

"Abstract Composition III" in Turquoise Blue Green Orange Modern Art Spots
Located in Brooklyn, NY
"Abstract Composition III" by James Chadwick is from his series that takes from vintage patterning, zooming in to see the abstraction of the detail whic...
Category

2010s Abstract Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Paper

"Abstract Composition II" in Green Orange Yellow and Black Modern Art Spots
Located in Brooklyn, NY
"Abstract Composition II" by James Chadwick is from his series that takes from vintage patterning, zooming in to see the abstraction of the detail which...
Category

2010s Abstract Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Paper

"Abstract Composition I" in Red Orange Yellow and Black Modern Art Spots
Located in Brooklyn, NY
"Abstract Composition I" by James Chadwick is from his series that takes from vintage patterning, zooming in to see the abstraction of the detail which ...
Category

2010s Abstract Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Paper

"Vase of Flowers Blue" After Jan Davidsz. de Heem Tulips photograph
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Claire Clarkson's "Vase of Flowers Blue" After Jan Davidsz. de Heem is from a series of photographs exploring the replication of the cyanotype photographic...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Paper

"Red Empire" Empire State Building Photograph Art Deco
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Claire Clarkson's "Red Empire" is from a series of photographs exploring the replication of the antiquated photographic and printing process through modern technologies. Her works of...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Paper

"Red Chrysler" Building Photograph Art Deco
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Claire Clarkson's "Red Chrysler" is from a series of photographs exploring the replication of the antiquated photographic and printing process through modern technologies. Her works ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Paper

"Blue Empire" Empire State Building Photograph Art Deco
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Claire Clarkson's "Blue Empire" is from a series of photographs exploring the replication of the cyanotype photographic process through modern technologies...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Paper

"Blue Ivy" foliage leaves photograph
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Claire Clarkson's "Blue Ivy" is from a series of photographs exploring the replication of the cyanotype photographic process through modern technologies. Her ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Paper

"Blue Ivy II" Foliage leaves photograph
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Claire Clarkson's "Blue Ivy II" is from a series of photographs exploring the replication of the cyanotype photographic process through modern technologies. H...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Paper

"Brigitte" (Robin Egg Blue) Brigitte Bardot Pop Art Fashion Portrait Photograph
Located in Brooklyn, NY
"Brigitte" (Robin Egg Blue) by artist Sarah Hanhart is from her series of Hollywood movie stars, where she explores female ideas of beauty by eliminating all other relevant informati...
Category

2010s Modern Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Paper

"Raquel" (Tiffany Blue) Raquel Welch Pop Art Fashion Portrait Photograph
Located in Brooklyn, NY
"Raquel" (Tiffany Blue) by artist Sarah Hanhart is from her series of Hollywood movie stars, where she explores female ideas of beauty by eliminating all other relevant information e...
Category

2010s Modern Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Paper

"Raquel" Pink Raquel Welch Pop Art Fashion Portrait Photograph
Located in Brooklyn, NY
"Raquel" (Pink) by artist Sarah Hanhart is from her series of Hollywood movie stars, where she explores female ideas of beauty by eliminating all other relevant information except fo...
Category

2010s Modern Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Paper

"Raquel" (Robin Egg Blue) Raquel Welch Pop Art Fashion Portrait Photograph
Located in Brooklyn, NY
"Raquel" (Robin Egg Blue) by artist Sarah Hanhart is from her series of Hollywood movie stars, where she explores female ideas of beauty by eliminating all other relevant information...
Category

2010s Modern Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Paper

"Liz" (Robin Egg Blue) Elizabeth Taylor Pop Art Fashion Portrait Photograph
Located in Brooklyn, NY
"Liz" (Robin Egg Blue) by artist Sarah Hanhart is from her series of Hollywood movie stars, where she explores female ideas of beauty by eliminating all other relevant information ex...
Category

2010s Modern Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Paper

"Liz" (Pink) Elizabeth Taylor Pop Art Fashion Portrait Photo
Located in Brooklyn, NY
"Liz" (Pink) by artist Sarah Hanhart is from her series of Hollywood movie stars, where she explores female ideas of beauty by eliminating all other relevant information except for t...
Category

2010s Modern Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Paper

Code LI-L4. LED Installation Hi-tech Modern Geometric Abstract Art
Located in Norwalk, CT
LI L4 – light installation art. Mixed media, LED technology. 48″X48″. 2021. This art is installation of plexiglass sheet on the deep 48"X48"X4" frame. The sides of the frame are mirr...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Mirror, Epoxy Resin, Plexiglass, Wood, Paper, LED Light, Acrylic, Mica

L’avalee des non dits
Located in Saint Ouen, FR
Manitoba - Swallowing the Unknown -2017 Digital print, made in 12 numbered copies, presented in an aluminium box in Plexiglas. The optical rendering sublimates the colors. Manitoba ...
Category

2010s Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Etching

RANDOM IMPRESSION, W 10th St, New York, 2014 by Claudia Fauth
Located in Berlin, DE
2 photographs inside an iluminated plexi glass box, it gives a three dimensional impression. This box is one of a kind, It comes directly from the studio of the artist. Height 18.26 in ( 46,4 cm ), Width 13.38 in ( 34,0 cm ), Depth 2.36 in ( 6 cm ) Claudia Fauth a true Berlin artist who is celebrating the spirit of a traveler. She has created something consistently unique in style and appreciation. She is an award winning artist, born in Berlin, Germany 1962. She is known for her abstract works, and installations. Her works are in public collections in Austria, Belgium, Canada, England, Germany, Italy, France, Japan, Mexico, Switzerland, Poland, Spain and the US. Selection of exhibitions: ° 2014 Von der Avantgarde zur Moderne, Berlin The Original Miami Beach Antique...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Photographic Film, Photogravure

Parabola Still
Located in Henderson, NV
Parabola Still is a complex integration of mathematical elements through collinear intersects completing a geometric picture with vivid colors. The painting represents Singer's studi...
Category

1990s Abstract Geometric Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Acrylic

Small Pile
Located in Lincoln, RI
"Small Pile" is part of a series of paintings on plexiglass that depicts multi colored masses. The maze like patterns are created using a router (woodworking tool...
Category

2010s Abstract Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Acrylic

Clouds 18
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Dimensions: 48 x 48 in. Depth: 1/4 in. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutti...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Clouds 16
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Dimensions: 48 x 48 in. Depth: 1/4 in. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutti...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Clouds 13
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Dimensions: 48 x 48 in. Depth: 1/4 in. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutti...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Clouds 11
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Dimensions: 48 x 48 in. Depth: 1/4 in. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his expertise in photography cast him as pioneer in digital art and allow him to develop virtual matrix from which he extracts his images. In his works he explores a universe that lies at the crossroad of abstraction and the figurative, inviting the viewer to determine if what he sees is a reflection of reality or imagination. Through is truly unique approach RIOUX is one of the most innovative artists in digital creations and one of the few creative minds able to blend with such keenness aesthetics research and critical distance. Whether they translate into a Dantesque urbanity or the infinite horizon of a turquoise ocean, the urban territory reflected by his creations offers a dystopian view of the world, challenging our attitude towards the environment and the future. From the onset, RIOUX has no intention of matching IRL expectations of what digital art 'should' look like, but strives to play with our notions of what's real, what's not, how we remember, and how we infer meaning into imaginary visual constructs. --- RIOUX started the Cloud project in 2022. Paul-Emile Rioux’s series Cloud, like his other work, is a kind of aesthetic thought experiment. Each square image is bisected symmetrically, or nearly symmetrically, by a tidy horizon. The upper half display forms that appear as clouds, the bottom as an underwater seascape, yet at the same time mimics the cloudlike formations of above. Formally these works reference hard-edged abstraction, minimalism and abstract expressionism, though juxtaposed with a sort of Instagram lifestyle sensibility. When shown as a gridded series, they recall the Instagram account @insta_repeat which curates gridded typologies of nearly identical influencer photos – for instance sunsets on a beach, or campfires with hiking boot clad feet visible in the foreground, transforming images, which individually are meant to signify the good life, into symbols of stifling homogeneity, cynically trying to capitalize on mass-produced sensations. Unlike past movements in abstract or minimal art, however, Rioux is not striving to create self-contained objects, but windows into deeper currents that churn in the dark spaces where culture, technology and the subconscious flow together. Rioux’s digital works are not specifically images, but notes, ways of thinking. They connect to a larger discourse. With Clouds, Rioux thinks aloud about what is hidden and what is revealed in our relationships to technology and nature. It is a meditation on “the cloud,” which, like real clouds, seem immaterial, but in fact are physical and have a material impact on the world. Rioux considers the juxtaposition between weight and weightlessness – the apparent weightlessness of virtual reality, against the mass, the inescapability of the material world. Technology promises a world of lightness, connectivity and the bounty of limitless growth, or if it cannot quite muster that illusion, at least the offer of escape into a simulated universe of carnivalesque distraction shepherding us away from the environmental catastrophe our economic system inflicts on the earth. In this series Rioux asks us to reflect on what the clouds hide. There are 18 pieces in the Cloud collection. Each archival pigment print is produced under the supervision of the artist. The print is mounted under a single piece of 1/4"/ 6 mm gallery...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Clouds
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Dimensions: 48 x 48 in. Depth: 1/4 in. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his expertise in photography cast him as pioneer in digital art and allow him to develop virtual matrix from which he extracts his images. In his works he explores a universe that lies at the crossroad of abstraction and the figurative, inviting the viewer to determine if what he sees is a reflection of reality or imagination. Through is truly unique approach RIOUX is one of the most innovative artists in digital creations and one of the few creative minds able to blend with such keenness aesthetics research and critical distance. Whether they translate into a Dantesque urbanity or the infinite horizon of a turquoise ocean, the urban territory reflected by his creations offers a dystopian view of the world, challenging our attitude towards the environment and the future. From the onset, RIOUX has no intention of matching IRL expectations of what digital art 'should' look like, but strives to play with our notions of what's real, what's not, how we remember, and how we infer meaning into imaginary visual constructs. --- RIOUX started the Cloud project in 2022. Paul-Emile Rioux’s series Cloud, like his other work, is a kind of aesthetic thought experiment. Each square image is bisected symmetrically, or nearly symmetrically, by a tidy horizon. The upper half display forms that appear as clouds, the bottom as an underwater seascape, yet at the same time mimics the cloudlike formations of above. Formally these works reference hard-edged abstraction, minimalism and abstract expressionism, though juxtaposed with a sort of Instagram lifestyle sensibility. When shown as a gridded series, they recall the Instagram account @insta_repeat which curates gridded typologies of nearly identical influencer photos – for instance sunsets on a beach, or campfires with hiking boot clad feet visible in the foreground, transforming images, which individually are meant to signify the good life, into symbols of stifling homogeneity, cynically trying to capitalize on mass-produced sensations. Unlike past movements in abstract or minimal art, however, Rioux is not striving to create self-contained objects, but windows into deeper currents that churn in the dark spaces where culture, technology and the subconscious flow together. Rioux’s digital works are not specifically images, but notes, ways of thinking. They connect to a larger discourse. With Clouds, Rioux thinks aloud about what is hidden and what is revealed in our relationships to technology and nature. It is a meditation on “the cloud,” which, like real clouds, seem immaterial, but in fact are physical and have a material impact on the world. Rioux considers the juxtaposition between weight and weightlessness – the apparent weightlessness of virtual reality, against the mass, the inescapability of the material world. Technology promises a world of lightness, connectivity and the bounty of limitless growth, or if it cannot quite muster that illusion, at least the offer of escape into a simulated universe of carnivalesque distraction shepherding us away from the environmental catastrophe our economic system inflicts on the earth. In this series Rioux asks us to reflect on what the clouds hide. There are 18 pieces in the Cloud collection. Each archival pigment print is produced under the supervision of the artist. The print is mounted under a single piece of 1/4"/ 6 mm gallery...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Clouds 2
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Dimensions: 48 x 48 in. Depth: 1/4 in. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his expertise in photography cast him as pioneer in digital art and allow him to develop virtual matrix from which he extracts his images. In his works he explores a universe that lies at the crossroad of abstraction and the figurative, inviting the viewer to determine if what he sees is a reflection of reality or imagination. Through is truly unique approach RIOUX is one of the most innovative artists in digital creations and one of the few creative minds able to blend with such keenness aesthetics research and critical distance. Whether they translate into a Dantesque urbanity or the infinite horizon of a turquoise ocean, the urban territory reflected by his creations offers a dystopian view of the world, challenging our attitude towards the environment and the future. From the onset, RIOUX has no intention of matching IRL expectations of what digital art 'should' look like, but strives to play with our notions of what's real, what's not, how we remember, and how we infer meaning into imaginary visual constructs. --- RIOUX started the Cloud project in 2022. Paul-Emile Rioux’s series Cloud, like his other work, is a kind of aesthetic thought experiment. Each square image is bisected symmetrically, or nearly symmetrically, by a tidy horizon. The upper half display forms that appear as clouds, the bottom as an underwater seascape, yet at the same time mimics the cloudlike formations of above. Formally these works reference hard-edged abstraction, minimalism and abstract expressionism, though juxtaposed with a sort of Instagram lifestyle sensibility. When shown as a gridded series, they recall the Instagram account @insta_repeat which curates gridded typologies of nearly identical influencer photos – for instance sunsets on a beach, or campfires with hiking boot clad feet visible in the foreground, transforming images, which individually are meant to signify the good life, into symbols of stifling homogeneity, cynically trying to capitalize on mass-produced sensations. Unlike past movements in abstract or minimal art, however, Rioux is not striving to create self-contained objects, but windows into deeper currents that churn in the dark spaces where culture, technology and the subconscious flow together. Rioux’s digital works are not specifically images, but notes, ways of thinking. They connect to a larger discourse. With Clouds, Rioux thinks aloud about what is hidden and what is revealed in our relationships to technology and nature. It is a meditation on “the cloud,” which, like real clouds, seem immaterial, but in fact are physical and have a material impact on the world. Rioux considers the juxtaposition between weight and weightlessness – the apparent weightlessness of virtual reality, against the mass, the inescapability of the material world. Technology promises a world of lightness, connectivity and the bounty of limitless growth, or if it cannot quite muster that illusion, at least the offer of escape into a simulated universe of carnivalesque distraction shepherding us away from the environmental catastrophe our economic system inflicts on the earth. In this series Rioux asks us to reflect on what the clouds hide. There are 18 pieces in the Cloud collection. Each archival pigment print is produced under the supervision of the artist. The print is mounted under a single piece of 1/4"/ 6 mm gallery...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Renaissance - Revival 14
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Dimensions: 48 x 48 in. Depth: 1/4 in. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutti...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Clouds 9
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Dimensions: 48 x 48 in. Depth: 1/4 in. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his expertise in photography cast him as pioneer in digital art and allow him to develop virtual matrix from which he extracts his images. In his works he explores a universe that lies at the crossroad of abstraction and the figurative, inviting the viewer to determine if what he sees is a reflection of reality or imagination. Through is truly unique approach RIOUX is one of the most innovative artists in digital creations and one of the few creative minds able to blend with such keenness aesthetics research and critical distance. Whether they translate into a Dantesque urbanity or the infinite horizon of a turquoise ocean, the urban territory reflected by his creations offers a dystopian view of the world, challenging our attitude towards the environment and the future. From the onset, RIOUX has no intention of matching IRL expectations of what digital art 'should' look like, but strives to play with our notions of what's real, what's not, how we remember, and how we infer meaning into imaginary visual constructs. --- RIOUX started the Cloud project in 2022. Paul-Emile Rioux’s series Cloud, like his other work, is a kind of aesthetic thought experiment. Each square image is bisected symmetrically, or nearly symmetrically, by a tidy horizon. The upper half display forms that appear as clouds, the bottom as an underwater seascape, yet at the same time mimics the cloudlike formations of above. Formally these works reference hard-edged abstraction, minimalism and abstract expressionism, though juxtaposed with a sort of Instagram lifestyle sensibility. When shown as a gridded series, they recall the Instagram account @insta_repeat which curates gridded typologies of nearly identical influencer photos – for instance sunsets on a beach, or campfires with hiking boot clad feet visible in the foreground, transforming images, which individually are meant to signify the good life, into symbols of stifling homogeneity, cynically trying to capitalize on mass-produced sensations. Unlike past movements in abstract or minimal art, however, Rioux is not striving to create self-contained objects, but windows into deeper currents that churn in the dark spaces where culture, technology and the subconscious flow together. Rioux’s digital works are not specifically images, but notes, ways of thinking. They connect to a larger discourse. With Clouds, Rioux thinks aloud about what is hidden and what is revealed in our relationships to technology and nature. It is a meditation on “the cloud,” which, like real clouds, seem immaterial, but in fact are physical and have a material impact on the world. Rioux considers the juxtaposition between weight and weightlessness – the apparent weightlessness of virtual reality, against the mass, the inescapability of the material world. Technology promises a world of lightness, connectivity and the bounty of limitless growth, or if it cannot quite muster that illusion, at least the offer of escape into a simulated universe of carnivalesque distraction shepherding us away from the environmental catastrophe our economic system inflicts on the earth. In this series Rioux asks us to reflect on what the clouds hide. There are 18 pieces in the Cloud collection. Each archival pigment print is produced under the supervision of the artist. The print is mounted under a single piece of 1/4"/ 6 mm gallery museum acrylic...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Clouds 8
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Dimensions: 48 x 48 in. Depth: 1/4 in. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his expertise in photography cast him as pioneer in digital art and allow him to develop virtual matrix from which he extracts his images. In his works he explores a universe that lies at the crossroad of abstraction and the figurative, inviting the viewer to determine if what he sees is a reflection of reality or imagination. Through is truly unique approach RIOUX is one of the most innovative artists in digital creations and one of the few creative minds able to blend with such keenness aesthetics research and critical distance. Whether they translate into a Dantesque urbanity or the infinite horizon of a turquoise ocean, the urban territory reflected by his creations offers a dystopian view of the world, challenging our attitude towards the environment and the future. From the onset, RIOUX has no intention of matching IRL expectations of what digital art 'should' look like, but strives to play with our notions of what's real, what's not, how we remember, and how we infer meaning into imaginary visual constructs. --- RIOUX started the Cloud project in 2022. Paul-Emile Rioux’s series Cloud, like his other work, is a kind of aesthetic thought experiment. Each square image is bisected symmetrically, or nearly symmetrically, by a tidy horizon. The upper half display forms that appear as clouds, the bottom as an underwater seascape, yet at the same time mimics the cloudlike formations of above. Formally these works reference hard-edged abstraction, minimalism and abstract expressionism, though juxtaposed with a sort of Instagram lifestyle sensibility. When shown as a gridded series, they recall the Instagram account @insta_repeat which curates gridded typologies of nearly identical influencer photos – for instance sunsets on a beach, or campfires with hiking boot clad feet visible in the foreground, transforming images, which individually are meant to signify the good life, into symbols of stifling homogeneity, cynically trying to capitalize on mass-produced sensations. Unlike past movements in abstract or minimal art, however, Rioux is not striving to create self-contained objects, but windows into deeper currents that churn in the dark spaces where culture, technology and the subconscious flow together. Rioux’s digital works are not specifically images, but notes, ways of thinking. They connect to a larger discourse. With Clouds, Rioux thinks aloud about what is hidden and what is revealed in our relationships to technology and nature. It is a meditation on “the cloud,” which, like real clouds, seem immaterial, but in fact are physical and have a material impact on the world. Rioux considers the juxtaposition between weight and weightlessness – the apparent weightlessness of virtual reality, against the mass, the inescapability of the material world. Technology promises a world of lightness, connectivity and the bounty of limitless growth, or if it cannot quite muster that illusion, at least the offer of escape into a simulated universe of carnivalesque distraction shepherding us away from the environmental catastrophe our economic system inflicts on the earth. In this series Rioux asks us to reflect on what the clouds hide. There are 18 pieces in the Cloud collection. Each archival pigment print is produced under the supervision of the artist. The print is mounted under a single piece of 1/4"/ 6 mm gallery museum acrylic...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Renaissance - Revival 7
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Dimensions: 48 x 48 in. Depth: 1/4 in. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutti...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Renaissance - Revival 2
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Dimensions: 48 x 48 in. Depth: 1/4 in. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutti...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Tuquoise 13
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Tuquoise 11
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Tuquoise 10
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Turquoise 9
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Turquoise 5
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Turquoise 6
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Turquoise 3
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Tuquoise 1
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

City Landcuts - Vision of a Urban Territory - Abstract Cityscapes
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

City Landcuts - Vision of a Urban Territory - Abstract Cityscapes
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

City Landcuts - Vision of a Urban Territory - Abstract Cityscapes
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

City Landcuts - Vision of a Urban Territory - Abstract Cityscapes
Located in Miami, FL
Archival photo print under acrylic glass. Artist and photographer Paul-Émile Rioux lives in Montréal, Canada. His lifelong interest in cutting-edge media technology as well as his ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Justice
Located in Miami, FL
Martin Engler (b. 1953) was born in Grabs (SG), Switzerland. He now lives in Geneva. After studying art in Zurich he developed diverse techniques: mixed media, oil painting, collage,...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Metal, Iron

Grapes on the Vine, Ed 9
Located in Napa, CA
X-ray. Digital C-type mounted onto Dibond, Plexi Face We live in a world obsessed with image, what we look like, what our clothes, houses, and cars look like etc. Nick Veasey count...
Category

2010s Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass

Terre en vue
Located in Miami, FL
Martin Engler (b. 1953) was born in Grabs (SG), Switzerland. He now lives in Geneva. After studying art in Zurich he developed diverse techniques: mixed media, oil painting, collage, bronze casting and sculpture. He executes “corporate portraits» for private individuals and companies - communication through art is born. His works are snapshots of an emotional journey linking daily life to art. His transparent «Life Portraits» leave enough space for the spectator to construct his/her own interpretation. In 2008, during a stay in Havana, Cuba, Martin Engler discovered the ancient techniques of collagraphy and monotypography. His participation at the 10th Havana Biennial is the subject of the documentary “Cuba, la caja...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Metal, Iron

Protest, Black and White Lenticular Print by DJ Leon, 47 x 33 in
Located in White Plains, NY
'Protest' by DJ Leon. The lenticular print measures 47 x 33 inches and contains images that shift depending on the viewer's perspective. Visuals of 1970s protests appear alongside sy...
Category

2010s Pop Art Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Digital, Lenticular

Dimensional Layers 12, 2021
Located in Park City, UT
wall hanging sculpture, acrylic mixed media and barn wood
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Wood, Acrylic

Parallel Layers 12 white, black, gold
Located in Park City, UT
Acrylic mixed media layered on plexiglass
Category

2010s Abstract Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Acrylic

Parallel Layers Gray and Red 1
Located in Park City, UT
Acrylic media layered on plexiglass
Category

2010s Abstract Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Acrylic

Urban Expressionist Photography Titled "Hermes" of Man on a Bicycle in NYC
Located in Plainview, NY
A beautiful urban expressionist photography in black and white of a man riding his bicycle in New York City entitled " Hermes " on plexiglass by the contemporary artist Marc Vanderme...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Modern Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Paper, Plexiglass

Mixed Media Print Entitled "End of Days", Framed
Located in Plainview, NY
An exceptional mixed media photo collage printed on ultra premium photo luster by the contemporary artist Marc Vandermeer ( American, 1950's). The art work entitled "End of Days" and depicts a city in flames. Dimensions: 21” H x 27” W x 0.5” D About the artist : Art has been a part of Marc's DNA since birth. His mother, a New York-based artist, sculptor, and teacher, continually exposed him to the world of galleries and museums, between their home in SoHo and summers spent in Provincetown, MA. He began practicing early, attending high schools specializing in art and summer workshops in Provincetown, and studying art history in Florence, Italy. In 1971 he enrolled at The Philadelphia College of Art, initially as a painter but ultimately graduating with a BFA Film in 1976. He studied under photographer Ray K...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Modern Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Paper

On The Rocks - Ltd ed
Located in New York, NY
Shot from a helicopter. Mounted on plexiglass. Floats in white frame. About the Artist Dinesh Boaz creates a dynamic juxtaposition between the natural landscape and our involv...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Dreams City - Ltd Ed
Located in New York, NY
NYC. Shot from a helicopter. Mounted on plexiglass. Floats in white frame. About the Artist Dinesh Boaz creates a dynamic juxtaposition between the natural landscape and our ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Magic Lt Ed
Located in New York, NY
Shot from a helicopter. Mounted on plexiglass. Floats in white frame. About the Artist Dinesh Boaz creates a dynamic juxtaposition between the natural landscape and our involv...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Breathe - Ltd Ed
Located in New York, NY
Shot from a helicopter. Mounted on plexiglass. Floats in white frame. About the Artist Dinesh Boaz creates a dynamic juxtaposition between the natural landscape and our involv...
Category

2010s Contemporary Art by Medium: Plexiglass

Materials

Plexiglass, Archival Pigment

Plexiglass art for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Plexiglass art available on 1stDibs. While artists have worked in this medium across a range of time periods, art made with this material during the 21st Century is especially popular. If you’re looking to add art created with this material to introduce a provocative pop of color and texture to an otherwise neutral space in your home, the works available on 1stDibs include elements of blue, purple, red, orange and other colors. There are many well-known artists whose body of work includes ceramic sculptures. Popular artists on 1stDibs associated with pieces like this include Nemo Jantzen, Paul-Émile Rioux, Stefanie Schneider, and Tyler Shields. Frequently made by artists working in the Contemporary, Abstract, all of these pieces for sale are unique and many will draw the attention of guests in your home. Not every interior allows for large Plexiglass art, so small editions measuring 0.02 inches across are also available

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