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Tim Yanke
“Dragonfly”

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“Untitled”
Located in Warren, NJ
This is an rare Gerald Poussin original 1998 mixed media on canvas . In good condition measures 50x50 .
Category

1990s Mixed Media

Materials

Oil

"landscape"
Located in Warren, NJ
Large oil on canvas measures 56x44x2 frame is very delicate has minor damage
Category

1980s Paintings

Materials

Oil

“Rome Scene”
By James Baker Pyne
Located in Warren, NJ
James Baker Pyne oil painting on canvas. Comes with certificate in the back. In good condition. Measures 38x30
Category

19th Century Paintings

Materials

Oil

“Water scene”
Located in Warren, NJ
This is an Jacques Eitel Original Painting Large Oil On Canvas French Signed Art. Painting has some paint missing please check photos. Measures 30x18
Category

20th Century Paintings

Materials

Oil

“instrument of nature“
By Charles Lee
Located in Warren, NJ
Original Charles Lee painting. In good condition. Measures 31x28 . Providence in the back of the painting
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Paintings

Materials

Oil

“Coast Morning”
By John French
Located in Warren, NJ
This is an John French Texas Artist Original Oil Painting On Board Made 1991. In excellent condition. Measures 24x27
Category

20th Century Paintings

Materials

Oil

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A group of figures heads for icy distant mountains. A familiar enough scene of polar explorers hauling their sledges. Yet somehow this does not quite fit the heroic mold. The ice and sky are tinged a movie musical pale blue and their gear is a bit too colorful for the era of man-hauling. And then there’s the sled, piled high not with boxes of supplies but with a jumbled heap of antiquities: Greek Athenas, bits of a coliseum, a ship’s great wheel. In Jessica Houston’s collage “The Long Haul,” the explorers drag history itself into the great beyond, their backs turned from their absurd load. But we take in the entire scene. In her suite of works, Over the Edge of the World, Houston uses oil on wood, ink on paper, and collages of found images, many from National Geographic Magazine, to rearrange the evidence – and thus history’s possibilities. Houston joins visual artists such as Judit Hersko, Katja Aglert, and Isaac Julien who have been inspired by the explorers of the past. Like them, she draws, in part, on the singular tradition of polar exploration narratives as well as fictions such as Ursula Le Guin’s “Sur” (1981), a utopian feminist hoax in which a party of South American women reach the South Pole in 1909, two years before the official arrival of European explorers. Le Guin’s explorers do not feel compelled to leave any written record or physical proof of their presence at the South Pole. If Le Guin’s women might have made it, what other traces have been missed? Collage can work alongside alternative history: it interprets, interrupts, and rearranges. It questions the completed whole, instead emphasizing composition and relation. Collage suggests it all might be … otherwise. Houston’s collages flaunt their second nature. Yet what they show remains somehow plausible. You want to believe what you’re beginning to see. In “A life Attuned to Larger Rhythms” Houston grids out rectangles of captured images to overwhelm the eye as the polar environment itself might (whiteout is a paradoxical species of optical overstimulation). Through the strangely ordered confusion of an ice survey grafted atop a chessboard, the mind begins to recognize new connections, emergent shapes: a different future? In “Launching Strategy” a yellow-orange pyramid balances garishly atop a tent. Which came first, the realist tent or the Platonic shape? Can we ever be sure that we’re not already seeing through premade abstractions? Or is it that baggage we’ve been dragging along? In “Architecture of the Anthropocene” and “Red Blood, Red Earth” Houston reroutes visually symbolic through-lines between women and non-European people and the official history in which they appear dimly or not at all. A full-skirted woman holds onto the tether of a kite that seems to pull her upwards towards a weather balloon floating above an Antarctic base’s radio tower; a row of tropical workers wielding pickaxes folds into the trajectory of a sailor aiming a bow and arrow at an iceberg stained with red. These are not people or images normally associated with polar discovery. But shouldn’t they matter? “Territory Over Land” strips in a scene from a painted depiction of the tropics, possibly from one of Captain James Cook’s circumnavigations. “Captain Cook’s Legacy” more directly confronts an official portrait of Cook with the torn-in eyes from what can only be described as the explorer’s anonymous dark Other. The hybrid portrait is a kind of contact zone. “Henson and Peary – Past Entanglements” is a cooler, less volatile twin portrait of disputed discoverer of the North Pole Robert Peary...
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