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Amy Genser
Crushing On It

2019

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  • Fragments V
    By Seth Clark
    Located in Philadelphia, PA
    This is an original paper, charcoal, pastel, graphite, and acrylic on wood panel artwork by Seth Clark measuring 40”h x 30”w. Seth Clark grew up in Seekonk, Massachusetts and stud...
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    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Mixed Media

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    Paste, Wood, Charcoal, Acrylic, Archival Paper, Graphite

  • Eden's Rave
    Located in London, GB
    "Eden's Rave" by Rafael Melendez is a captivating hybrid artwork that combines drawings, painting, and sculpture to create a visually stimulating and thought-provoking composition. T...
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  • Innocent
    Located in New York, NY
    The art of Philip Wittmann is founded on signals. For him, signs serve as a bridge between abstraction, reality and writing, too. When he was 26 years ...
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    2010s Contemporary Mixed Media

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    Ink, Handmade Paper, Acrylic, Watercolor, Archival Paper

  • Unforgettable
    Located in New York, NY
    The art of Philip Wittmann is founded on signals. For him, signs serve as a bridge between abstraction, reality and writing, too. When he was 26 years old, he began painting as a hobbyist using 'pure' abstraction. However, he believed his work lacked a solid foundation upon which to grow. ​He discovered a book on the origins of the Chinese alphabet, which origins are essentially signs, in 2008 while taking a calligraphy class. The 26 letters of our Latin alphabet are less pictorial than the Chinese characters as we know them now. He discovered that pictorial representation is more prevalent when examining the origins of alphabets—all alphabets, in fact—because there is frequently a similarity between the sign's true meaning and what it is meant to represent. For instance, the symbol for a turtle in the original Chinese script resembles a turtle. Wittmann loves signs as they leave room for interpretation. For instance, if one writes “the sky is blue”, one will make for themself a mental representation of a blue sky, even if each one-off us will probably have some nuance in our own mental representation of that blue sky. On the other hand, a sign can...
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    2010s Contemporary Mixed Media

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    Acrylic, Watercolor, Ink, Archival Paper, Handmade Paper

  • Looking For Tomorrow
    Located in New York, NY
    The art of Philip Wittmann is founded on signals. For him, signs serve as a bridge between abstraction, reality and writing, too. When he was 26 years old, he began painting as a hobbyist using 'pure' abstraction. However, he believed his work lacked a solid foundation upon which to grow. ​He discovered a book on the origins of the Chinese alphabet, which origins are essentially signs, in 2008 while taking a calligraphy class. The 26 letters of our Latin alphabet are less pictorial than the Chinese characters as we know them now. He discovered that pictorial representation is more prevalent when examining the origins of alphabets—all alphabets, in fact—because there is frequently a similarity between the sign's true meaning and what it is meant to represent. For instance, the symbol for a turtle in the original Chinese script resembles a turtle. Wittmann loves signs as they leave room for interpretation. For instance, if one writes “the sky is blue”, one will make for themself a mental representation of a blue sky, even if each one-off us will probably have some nuance in our own mental representation of that blue sky. On the other hand, a sign can...
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  • Skateboard 421
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