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Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

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Style: Abstract Geometric
Period: 1960s
R.S.P. (Perspective Space Search)
Located in Como, IT
Paolo Minoli (1942-2004) R.S.P. (Perspective Space Search) 1969 Acrylic on Canvas Size 40x40 cm (63x63 cm including the frame with invisible glass) Bibliography: Pirovano, Paolo Min...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic Polymer

Sail Boat Races Sausalito, Mid Century Modern Abstract Geometric Seascape
By Ray Mathewson
Located in Soquel, CA
Mid-Century Modern abstract geometric composition of pastel colored sailboats on a black background, with beautiful abstracted colorful reflections, gathering in Bay Area Sausalito Harbor by Ray Mathewson (American, d. 1968). Signed "Mathewson" in the lower right corner. Titled "The Meet" on verso. Unframed. Image: 24"H x 30"W. Ray Mathewson (American, d. 1968) was an artist and draftsman. He was married to Ruth Parker (American, b. 1930), also an accomplished artist. He died unexpectedly of a stroke in 1968. Exhibited, Toumala Arts, Fort Bragg...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Masonite, Oil

1967 Abstract Geometric Expressionist NYC MoMA Silkscreen Card, Stable Gallery
Located in Surfside, FL
Al Dickstein New York school Abstract Geometric work. Came in with small collection of his work including signed letters and a signed card and some monogrammed pieces. Signed and inscribed by artist. Showed at New York's Stable Gallery...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Paper, Ink

Untitled 1960s Abstract Geometric Expressionist New York Stable Gallery Drawing
Located in Surfside, FL
Al Dickstein New York school Abstract Geometric work. Came in with small collection of his work including signed letters and a signeed card and some monogrammed pieces.. Signed with monogram and inscribed and signed verso. Showed at New York's Stable Gallery...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Paper, Color Pencil

Study for Spring Sweep, Signed 1960s painting, Washington Color School, Framed
Located in New York, NY
HOWARD MEHRING Study for Spring Sweep, 1964 Oil, oil stick, charcoal, gouache painting on paper Hand signed, dated and annotated with the names of the colors in graphite pencil on the front This is a unique work Frame included: elegantly matted and framed in a museum quality dark blue wood frame with UV plexiglass This 1964 hard edge painting on paper...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil Crayon, Oil, Gouache, Mixed Media

Metallurgy, OP Art Painting by Jack Brusca
Located in Long Island City, NY
Artist: Jack Brusca, American (1939 - 1993) Title: Metallurgy Year: 1968 Medium: Oil on Canvas, signed, dated and titled verso Size: 20 x 20 in. (50.8 x 50.8 cm)
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Unique painting Concentric Squares (Mid Century Modern Geometric Abstraction)
Located in New York, NY
Josef Zenk Untitled Concentric Squares (Mid Century Modern Geometric Abstraction), ca. 1960 Oil on canvas painting Boldly signed by Josef Zenk on the lower right front Frame included...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Intersecting Magic Square
By Charmion von Wiegand
Located in New York, NY
Charmion von Wiegand Intersecting Magic Square, ca. 1963 Gouache on paperboard Signed and titled on the back of the artwork. The signature shown on the frame back is a photo of the actual signature on the artwork itself. Frame Included: elegantly floated and framed in hand made white wood museum frame with UV plexiglass This work is signed and titled on the back of the artwork itself. The signature shown on the back of the frame is a photo of the actual signature, since the actual pencil signature and title is on the artwork itself, which can't be seen within the frame Measurements: Frame: 21 x 17 x 1.5 inches Artwork: 18 x 14.25 inches The Estate of the celebrated artist Charmion Von Wiegand has been represented exclusively by Michael Rosenfeld...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Gouache, Handmade Paper, Mixed Media, Pencil

"Jean Jean" Larry Zox, Color Field, Geometric Abstraction, Hard-Edge, Yellow
Located in New York, NY
Larry Zox Jean Jean, 1964 Signed, dated, and titled on the stretcher Liquitex on canvas 58 x 62 inches Provenance: Solomon & Co., New York Private Collection, NJ Estate of the above, 2023 Committed to abstraction throughout his career, Larry Zox played a central role in the Color Field discourse of the 1960s and 1970s. His work of the time, consisting of brilliantly colored geometric shapes in dynamic juxtapositions, demonstrated that hard-edge painting was neither cold nor formalistic. He reused certain motifs, but he did so less to explore their aspects than to “get at the specific character and quality of each painting in and for itself,” as James Monte stated in his essay for Zox’s solo exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1973. By the 1970s, Zox was using a freer, more emotive method, while maintaining the autonomy of color, which increasingly became more important to him than structure in his late years. Zox began to receive attention in the 1960s, when he was included in several groundbreaking exhibitions of Color Field and Minimalist art, including Shape and Structure (1965), organized by Henry Geldzahler for the Gallery of Modern Art, New York, and Systemic Painting (1966), organized by Lawrence Alloway for the Guggenheim Museum. In 1973, the Whitney’s solo exhibition of Zox’s work gave recognition to his significance in the art scene of the preceding decade. In the following year, Zox was represented in the inaugural exhibition of the Hirshhorn Museum, which owns fourteen of his works. Zox was born in Des Moines, Iowa. He attended the University of Oklahoma and Drake University. While studying at the Des Moines Art Center, he was mentored by George Grosz, who despite his own figurative approach encouraged Zox’s forays into abstraction. In 1958, Zox moved to New York, joining the downtown art scene. His studio on 20th Street became a gathering place for artists, jazz musicians, bikers, and boxers. He occasionally sparred with the visiting fighters. He later established a studio in East Hampton, where he painted and fished including using a helicopter to spot fish. In the 1950s and early 1960s, Zox’s works were collages consisting of painted pieces of paper stapled onto sheets of plywood. He then produced paintings that were illusions of collages, including both torn- and trued-edged forms, to which he added a wide range of intense hues that created ambiguous surfaces. Next, he omitted the collage aspect of his work and applied flat color areas to create more complete statements of pure color and shape. From 1962 to 1965, he produced his Rotation Series, at first creating plywood and Plexiglas reliefs, which turned squares into dynamic polygons. He used these shapes in his paintings as well, employing white as a foil between colors to produce negative spaces that suggest that the colored shapes had only been cut out and laid down instead of painted. The New York Times noted in 1964: “The artist is hip, cool, adventurous, not content to stay with the mere exercise of sensibility that one sees in smaller works.” In 1965, he began the Scissors Jack...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Untitled
Located in Austin, TX
Oil on canvas. 77.25 x 59 in. 79.75 x 62 in. (framed) Custom framed in a solid hardwood floater, with a matte white finish. Provenance Estate of the artist Hollis Taggart...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Geometric Abstract
Located in Saratoga Springs, NY
Signed lower right. A major exponent of non-objective painting, Rolph Scarlett's career and artistic philosophy is closely linked with the early history of the Solomon R. Guggenhei...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil, Canvas

Untitled
Located in PARIS, FR
Alfonso Hüppi (1935) Untitled Mixed media on canvas (paint, wood) 49 x 54 cm Signed and date 1962 Hüppi was born 11 February 1935 in Switzerland. He was...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Wood, Oil

Untitled #4 /// Abstract Geometric Striped Jay Rosenblum New York Art Painting
Located in Saint Augustine, FL
Artist: Jay Rosenblum (American, 1933-1989) Title: "Untitled #4" *Signed by Rosenblum in black marker upper left on verso Circa: 1969 Medium: Original Acrylic Painting on Canvas Fram...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Paint, Acrylic

Untitled
Located in New York, NY
Lynn Leland Untitled Op Art painting, 1967-1968 Acrylic on Canvas (with Albright Knox Gallery Label, A. M Sachs Gallery Label, Atlantic Richfield Corporat...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

1968 Abstract Geometric Painting “Six Dimensions of Orange”
Located in New York, NY
Here we have a beautiful Geometric Abstract by Benjamin Cunningham. It is Acrylic on board, Painting is titled “color structures (six dimensions of orange)” painted in 1968. Overal...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Naval Occurrence, orange, blue & green mid-century, abstract geometrical work
Located in Beachwood, OH
Richard Andres (American, 1927-2013) Naval Occurrence, c. 1963 oil on canvas signed and titled verso 24 x 32 inches Richard Andres was born in Buffalo, New York in 1927. A graduate of the Cleveland Institute of Art in 1950, he was immediately drafted and served for two years in the army as a mural painter. He received his Master of Arts from Kent State in 1961. A frequent exhibitor at galleries and museums and winner of multiple May Show prizes, Andres taught art in the Cleveland Public Schools for 28 years, as well as teaching the University of Buffalo, the Cleveland Institute of Art and the Western Reserve University. Very little in Richard Andres’ childhood would have predicted his love of classical music, mid-century-modern architecture and certainly not his lifelong passion for art and in particular abstract art. Richard’s father, Raymond, had no more than a third-grade education, and his mother, Clara, was one of thirteen children – only three of whom lived into adulthood and none of whom attended high school. They lived, when Richard was a boy, in a dingy area of Buffalo, NY in a walk-up apartment situated above a tavern. Raymond and Clara supplemented the income from their factory jobs in the bar downstairs with Raymond playing ragtime on the piano and Clara serving drinks. This often left Richard and his two older brothers at home alone to fend for themselves. The two older boys, Raymond and Russell, were - unlike Richard- rather rough and tumble and entertained themselves with stickball, boxing and the like. Richard, on the other hand, from a very young age liked to draw, or better yet even, to paint with the small set of watercolors he received for Christmas one year. Paper, however, at the height of the depression, was hard to come by. Luckily, Clara used paper doilies as decoration for the apartment and Richard would contentedly paint and then cut up doilies, gluing the pieces together to create collages. At eight-years-old, he discovered the Albright-Knox Museum (then known as the Albright Art Gallery) and spent several hours a week there studying the paintings. He was particularly fond of Charles Burchfield‘s landscapes, enamored with their ‘messiness’ and thinking that they somehow captured more ‘feeling’ than works he was previously familiar with. For his tenth Christmas, he asked for and received a ‘how-to’ paint book by Elliot O’Hare. Through this self-teaching, he assembled the portfolio needed for acceptance to Buffalo Technical High School where he studied Advertising Arts. In his Junior year, he was encouraged to enter a watercolor painting, “Two Barns,” in the national 1944-45 Ingersoll Art Award Contest and was one of twelve grand prize winners – each one winning one hundred dollars. More importantly the painting was exhibited at the Carnegie Institute Galleries, which resulted in his winning a national scholarship to the Cleveland School of Art (The Cleveland Art Institute). He flourished at the art school under the tutelage of faculty members such as Carl Gaertner, as well as that of visiting artists such as William Sommer and Henry George Keller. He would say in later years that Gaertner, in particular, influenced his attitude toward life as well as art. “Gaertner,” Andres said, “believed that there was no need to be a ‘tortured artist’, that an artist should rather enjoy beauty, family, and life in general.” Free to spend his days as he chose, he wandered the Cleveland Art Museum for most of the hours he was not attending classes or painting; the remaining time was spent drinking coffee at a local hangout with art school friends – which is where he met fellow Henry Keller scholarship winner, Avis Johnson. Richard was immediately smitten with Avis, but being rather shy, it took him the entire summer of 1948 to build up his courage to ask her out. Over that summer he ‘thought about Avis’ and worked in a diner to save money. He also used the hundred-dollar prize money won in High School to visit the first Max Beckmann retrospective in the United States at the City Art Museum in St. Louis. Over a half century later he spoke of that exhibit with a reverence usually reserved for spiritual matters, “I walked in and it was like nothing I had ever seen before... the color...It just glowed.” Returning to campus in the Fall, the first thing he did was go to the coffee shop in hopes of finding Avis. He did, and she, upon seeing him, realized that she was also smitten with him. They quickly became known as ‘the couple’ on campus, and a year later, with Richard being drafted for the Korean war, they were quickly married by a Justice of the Peace, celebrating after with family at Avis’s Cleveland home. As a gift, faculty member John Paul Miller designed and made the simple gold wedding ring Avis wore for their 65 years of marriage. During those 65 years neither wavered in their mutual love, nor in the respect they shared for one another’s art. The couple lived in a converted chicken coop in Missouri while Richard was in boot camp. At the camp, he would volunteer for any job offered and one of those jobs ended up being painting road signs. His commander noticed how quickly and neatly he worked and gave him more painting work to do - eventually recommending him for a position painting murals for Army offices in Panama. Until her dying day, Avis remained angry that “The army got to keep those fabulous murals and they probably didn’t even know how wonderful they were.” In Panama, their first son, Mark, was born. After Richard’s discharge in 1953, they moved back to the Cleveland area and used the GI bill to attend Kent State gaining his BA in education. The small family then moved briefly to Buffalo, where Richard taught at the Albright Art School and the University of Buffalo – and their second son, Peter, was born. Richard had exhibited work in the Cleveland May Show and the Butler Art Museum during his art school years, and during the years in Buffalo, his work was exhibited at the gallery he had so loved as a child, the Albright Art Gallery. In 1956, the family moved back to the Cleveland area and Richard began teaching art at Lincoln West High School during the day while working toward his MA in art at Kent State in the evenings. Avis and Richard, with the help of an architect, designed their first home - a saltbox style house in Hudson, Ohio, and in 1958, their third son, Max (after Max Beckmann) was born. Richard enjoyed the consistency of teaching high school as well as the time it gave him to paint on the weekends and during the summer months. In 1961, he received his MA and his daughter, Claire, was born. With a fourth child, the house was much too small, and Avis and Richard began designing their second home. An admirer of MCM architecture, Richard’s favorite example of the style was the Farnsworth house – he often spoke of how the concepts behind this architectural style, particularly that of Mies van der Rohe, influenced his painting. Andres described himself as a 1950’s...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil

Pieces Collage, vibrant mid-century abstract. expressionist black, pink & red
Located in Beachwood, OH
Richard Andres (American, 1927-2013) Pieces Collage, c. 1965 collage on paper 14 x 18 inches Richard Andres was born in Buffalo, New York in 1927. A graduate of the Cleveland Institute of Art in 1950, he was immediately drafted and served for two years in the army as a mural painter. He received his Master of Arts from Kent State in 1961. A frequent exhibitor at galleries and museums and winner of multiple May Show prizes, Andres taught art in the Cleveland Public Schools for 28 years, as well as teaching the University of Buffalo, the Cleveland Institute of Art and the Western Reserve University. Very little in Richard Andres’ childhood would have predicted his love of classical music, mid-century-modern architecture and certainly not his lifelong passion for art and in particular abstract art. Richard’s father, Raymond, had no more than a third-grade education, and his mother, Clara, was one of thirteen children – only three of whom lived into adulthood and none of whom attended high school. They lived, when Richard was a boy, in a dingy area of Buffalo, NY in a walk-up apartment situated above a tavern. Raymond and Clara supplemented the income from their factory jobs in the bar downstairs with Raymond playing ragtime on the piano and Clara serving drinks. This often left Richard and his two older brothers at home alone to fend for themselves. The two older boys, Raymond and Russell, were - unlike Richard- rather rough and tumble and entertained themselves with stickball, boxing and the like. Richard, on the other hand, from a very young age liked to draw, or better yet even, to paint with the small set of watercolors he received for Christmas one year. Paper, however, at the height of the depression, was hard to come by. Luckily, Clara used paper doilies as decoration for the apartment and Richard would contentedly paint and then cut up doilies, gluing the pieces together to create collages. At eight-years-old, he discovered the Albright-Knox Museum (then known as the Albright Art Gallery) and spent several hours a week there studying the paintings. He was particularly fond of Charles Burchfield‘s landscapes, enamored with their ‘messiness’ and thinking that they somehow captured more ‘feeling’ than works he was previously familiar with. For his tenth Christmas, he asked for and received a ‘how-to’ paint book by Elliot O’Hare. Through this self-teaching, he assembled the portfolio needed for acceptance to Buffalo Technical High School where he studied Advertising Arts. In his Junior year, he was encouraged to enter a watercolor painting, “Two Barns,” in the national 1944-45 Ingersoll Art Award Contest and was one of twelve grand prize winners – each one winning one hundred dollars. More importantly the painting was exhibited at the Carnegie Institute Galleries, which resulted in his winning a national scholarship to the Cleveland School of Art (The Cleveland Art Institute). He flourished at the art school under the tutelage of faculty members such as Carl Gaertner, as well as that of visiting artists such as William Sommer and Henry George Keller. He would say in later years that Gaertner, in particular, influenced his attitude toward life as well as art. “Gaertner,” Andres said, “believed that there was no need to be a ‘tortured artist’, that an artist should rather enjoy beauty, family, and life in general.” Free to spend his days as he chose, he wandered the Cleveland Art Museum for most of the hours he was not attending classes or painting; the remaining time was spent drinking coffee at a local hangout with art school friends – which is where he met fellow Henry Keller scholarship winner, Avis Johnson. Richard was immediately smitten with Avis, but being rather shy, it took him the entire summer of 1948 to build up his courage to ask her out. Over that summer he ‘thought about Avis’ and worked in a diner to save money. He also used the hundred-dollar prize money won in High School to visit the first Max Beckmann retrospective in the United States at the City Art Museum in St. Louis. Over a half century later he spoke of that exhibit with a reverence usually reserved for spiritual matters, “I walked in and it was like nothing I had ever seen before... the color...It just glowed.” Returning to campus in the Fall, the first thing he did was go to the coffee shop in hopes of finding Avis. He did, and she, upon seeing him, realized that she was also smitten with him. They quickly became known as ‘the couple’ on campus, and a year later, with Richard being drafted for the Korean war, they were quickly married by a Justice of the Peace, celebrating after with family at Avis’s Cleveland home. As a gift, faculty member John Paul Miller designed and made the simple gold wedding ring Avis wore for their 65 years of marriage. During those 65 years neither wavered in their mutual love, nor in the respect they shared for one another’s art. The couple lived in a converted chicken coop in Missouri while Richard was in boot camp. At the camp, he would volunteer for any job offered and one of those jobs ended up being painting road signs. His commander noticed how quickly and neatly he worked and gave him more painting work to do - eventually recommending him for a position painting murals for Army offices in Panama. Until her dying day, Avis remained angry that “The army got to keep those fabulous murals and they probably didn’t even know how wonderful they were.” In Panama, their first son, Mark, was born. After Richard’s discharge in 1953, they moved back to the Cleveland area and used the GI bill to attend Kent State gaining his BA in education. The small family then moved briefly to Buffalo, where Richard taught at the Albright Art School and the University of Buffalo – and their second son, Peter, was born. Richard had exhibited work in the Cleveland May Show and the Butler Art Museum during his art school years, and during the years in Buffalo, his work was exhibited at the gallery he had so loved as a child, the Albright Art Gallery. In 1956, the family moved back to the Cleveland area and Richard began teaching art at Lincoln West High School during the day while working toward his MA in art at Kent State in the evenings. Avis and Richard, with the help of an architect, designed their first home - a saltbox style house in Hudson, Ohio, and in 1958, their third son, Max (after Max Beckmann) was born. Richard enjoyed the consistency of teaching high school as well as the time it gave him to paint on the weekends and during the summer months. In 1961, he received his MA and his daughter, Claire, was born. With a fourth child, the house was much too small, and Avis and Richard began designing their second home. An admirer of MCM architecture, Richard’s favorite example of the style was the Farnsworth house – he often spoke of how the concepts behind this architectural style, particularly that of Mies van der Rohe, influenced his painting. Andres described himself as a 1950’s...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

"Polyurethane Relief #16" White Abstract Geometric Sculptural Relief Painting
Located in Houston, TX
White abstract geometric sculptural relief painting by Houston, TX artist Robert Preusser. This painting features textured three-dimensional abstracted...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Mixed Media, Polyurethane, Gesso

Mid Century Modern 1960s Abstract Geometric Collage w Navy Blue, Green & Purple
Located in Soquel, CA
Dynamic late 1960's mixed media abstract geometric collage, with mulberry paper cut into curved and angular shapes and adhered in layers, in a unique color palette of navy blue, dark...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Mulberry Paper, Tissue Paper

Untitled
Located in New York, NY
ca. 1965 Acrylic on canvas 54 1/4 x 54 in. (137.8 x 137.2 cm) Signed, verso
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

"Forms" Black, Green, Red, and Orange Abstract Geometric Painting
Located in Houston, TX
This painting is a great example of David Adickes' early work that embodies the abstract geometric style. Most likely originally sold at DuBose Gallery in Houston, Texas. Circa 1960s...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Abstract American Geometric Oil Painting Martin Rosenthal 60 Mid Century Modern
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original abstract oil painting by American artist Martin Rosenthal signed by the artist and created in the late 1950's, early 1960's. This colorful dynamic work comes housed in a...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Paper, Oil

Geometric Abstract
Located in Saratoga Springs, NY
Signed lower left. About the artist: Rolph Scarlett was a painter of geometric abstraction during the American avant-garde movement of the 1930s and 1940s. Born in Guelph, Ontario,...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Work C.87. Oil on canvas by Masaaki Yamada (1961), geometric abstract painting
Located in Hong Kong, HK
Masaaki Yamada (1929-2010) Work C.87 Executed in 1961 Oil on canvas 65.2 x 45.6 cm. (25 5/8 x 17 6/8 in.) Signed, dated and artist’s seal in Japanese (on the reverse)
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Work C.030 Oil on canvas by Masaaki Yamada (1963), geometric abstract painting
Located in Hong Kong, HK
Masaaki Yamada (1929-2010) Work C.030 Executed in 1963 Oil on canvas 34 x 24.5 cm. (13 ⁷/₆₄ x 9 ⁴¹/₆₄ in.) Signed and dated in Japanese and Western characters (on the reverse)
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Mykonos Church Landscape
Located in Miami, FL
A vibrant example of the artist's precisionist style where a tight semi-abstract geometric composition is inspired by architecture and is reduced to simplified geometric shapes with...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Gouache, Board

Abstract American Geometric Oil Painting Martin Rosenthal 60 Mid Century Modern
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original abstract oil painting by American artist Martin Rosenthal signed by the artist and created in the late 1950's, early 1960's. This colorful dynamic work comes housed in a...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Paper, Oil

Mid Century Abstract Geometric painting Gold Balls Maroon Framed American
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original abstract geometric painting by an unknown artist in an artist made natural wood frame.
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Triangle - Yellow, Orange, and Pink Geometric Abstract Oil Painting
Located in New York, NY
This work by Martin Canin is a 60 x 50 inch geometric abstraction oil painting from 1974. Color is freed from objective context and becomes the subject in itself. The stillness of t...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Colourful, op-art modern painting "Movimenti Percettivi 70-69"
Located in Palm Beach, FL
Ferruccio Gard (Italy, 1940) is one of the pioneers and leading artist representatives of the Neo-Constructivist art, Programmed Art and Optical Art, which he has practiced since 1969. He is considered to be a master of colour, in his painting Gard creates original formal and compositional solutions of forms and colours. Exploring the geometric composition with chromatic and special themes Gards clasps the complexity of black and white and the extremes of the tonal scale of colours. Gard's work have been the subject of many writers, including Piero Dorazio and Virgilio Guidi, as well as renowned poets art art curators such as Jorge Amado...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

The Cat's Pajamas
Located in Long Island City, NY
Artist: Frank Roth, American (1936 - ) Title: The Cat's Pajamas Year: 1968 Medium: Oil on Canvas, signed, titled and dated verso Size: 66 x 72 in. (167.64 x 182.88 cm)
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil

Richard Huntington 1960s Geometric Abstraction Large Mid Century Modern NYC
Located in Buffalo, NY
A mid-century modern geometric abstract painting by American artist Richard Huntington. Richard Huntington (b. 1936) is an American painter, printmaker, and writer, is Critic Emerit...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil, Spray Paint, Acrylic

Blue and Black Abstract
Located in Lake Worth Beach, FL
Blue and Black Abstract, Artist signed and dated 1968 Size: 31x36.5 framed 32x37.5 Born in Sloviansk, Ukraine in 1942. A graduate of Kent State University, receiving a B.S. in Art Education and an M.A. in Painting. Studied in Paris, France. Professor of Art at Lakeland Community College. He was awarded the rank of Professor Emeritus in 2002 by Lakeland Community College, and held a retrospective of his work, "A Look Back 1965-2001," at the LCC Gallery in 2003. Listed in Marquis’ “Who’s Who Dictionary of International Biography,” “ Leaders of America,” “Who’s Who in the Arts, 1971-1972,” Artists/USA, 1972-1973, 1974-1975,” “Outstanding Young Men of America,”1971,” International Who’s Who in Art and Antiques, 1972,” Annuaire De L’Art International, 1974-1975, 1975-1976,” “Library Of Human Resources...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Cotton Canvas, Oil

Atatapa 1
Located in Kensington, MD
Acrylic on canvas Signed "Sander 1969" (Typewritten paper label states: LSE #75 Atatapa 1. 1965) Ludwig Sander was a painter of the New York School. He studied under Hans Hoffman and lived and worked in New York City and Sagaponack, Long Island. His work is well represented in many public collections. He was charter member of the Eighth Street Club (The Club) whose artist members included Willem and Elaine de Kooning, Jimmy Rosati, Giorgio Spaventi, Milton Resnick, Pat Passlof...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Parascape I
By David Whittaker
Located in Kensington, MD
Signed David Whittaker 1969 'Parascape I' Watercolor on graph paper framed under glass set in aluminum frame with masonite backing bearing label from the Redfern Gallery Ltd. 20 Cor...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Paper, Watercolor

Large Geometric Abstract Titled Africana
Located in Lake Worth Beach, FL
Africana Mid-Century Modern large and impressive mixed media, sand and oil on artist board. The painting is unsigned there is a small fragment of old paper label with number #21 titl...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Sandstone

Blue Abstract Painting
Located in Lake Worth Beach, FL
Blue Navy Abstract, Size: 31x36.5 framed 32x37.7 Walter Swyrydenko was born in Sloviansk, Ukraine in 1942. A graduate of Kent State University, receiving a B.S. in Art Education and an M.A. in Painting. Studied in Paris, France. Professor of Art at Lakeland Community College. He was awarded the rank of Professor Emeritus in 2002 by Lakeland Community College, and held a retrospective of his work, "A Look Back 1965-2001," at the LCC Gallery in 2003. Listed in Marquis’ “Who’s Who Dictionary of International Biography,” “ Leaders of America,” “Who’s Who in the Arts, 1971-1972,” Artists/USA, 1972-1973, 1974-1975,” “Outstanding Young Men of America,”1971,” International Who’s Who in Art and Antiques, 1972,” Annuaire De L’Art International, 1974-1975, 1975-1976,” “Library Of Human Resources...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Cotton Canvas, Oil

Swing,
By Ray Donarski
Located in Concord, MA
RAY DONARSKI (1935-1996) Swing, 1966 Oil on canvas 17 ½ x 17 ½ inches Signed, dated and inscribed verso: ‘Swing’ / Ray Donarski / 2/66 / 17 ½ x 17 ½ / For Mr. & Mrs. Passerman / New York 1966 Original frame Ray Donarski was one of a group of artists in New York known as the Bowery Boys during the early sixties. The group included Eva Hesse, Robert Mangold, Jack Youngerman, and Robert Rauschenberg among others. He is mentioned in several of art critic Lucy Lippard's articles on New York conceptual artists and Bowery Boy artists of that period. Donarski was a close friend of artist James Rosenquist. They had studied together at the Art Students League in New York. In January of 1962 Donarski helped Rosenquist set up his first solo exhibition at the Green Gallery in New York. In his book, Painting Below Zero: Notes on a Life in Art, Rosenquist recalls sitting on the floor with Donarski before opening night wondering if anyone would show up. The show sold out before it opened. When Rosenquist was broke and homeless in 1955 his friend Donarski told him he knew of a great job as a chauffeur and bartender for some very wealthy people. They went up to see them and split the job. Rosenquist took it for a year, and after a year, he gave it to Donarski. In an interview with Rosenquist he said “I lived in the lap of luxury with very little money, and was a chauffeur bopping around in a ’56 Lincoln town car and a ’56 Lincoln convertible with big fins on the car (laughs), great big fins. I did that for a year and then transferred into the International Sign Painters.” Donarski married Mary Lou Storm and had two children. He became known as the “American in Luxembourg”, dividing his time between New York and summers in Luxembourg, where he was represented by Galerie Paul Bruck and Galerie Horn. He also exhibited at the Westport Gallery...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

"Untitled" - Historic Yellow and Orange Geometric Abstract Oil Painting
Located in New York, NY
Untitled geometric abstract oil painting by Martin Canin, measuring 60x50-inch. Martin Canin’s work can be linked to two 1960s movements: Color field and Op Art. Like many artists of...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Orange Circle
Located in Saratoga Springs, NY
Signed & dated Verso. 1965 Paul Reed in 1970. He favored “staining” untreated canvas. Paul Reed, the last surviving member of the Washington Color School, who explored the complexities of color and form in vibrant bio-morphic and hard-edge abstract paintings, died on Sept. 26 at his home in Phoenix. He was 96. His death was confirmed by his daughter, Jean Reed Roberts. Mr. Reed acquired his public identity as an artist when he was included, along with Gene Davis, Kenneth Noland, Morris Louis, Thomas Downing and Howard Mehring, in “The Washington Color Painters,” a landmark traveling exhibition that began at the Washington Gallery of Modern Art in 1965. All of the other painters had been shown, the year before, in “Post-Painterly Abstraction,” a 31-artist exhibition at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art organized by the critic Clement Greenberg in an effort to write a new chapter in the historic march of abstract art. Like his fellow Washington artists, Mr. Reed rejected the hot, gestural approach of Abstract Expressionism and explored color and abstract forms in a cooler mode. Working with diluted acrylic paint, in discrete series that methodically explored formal issues, he created luminous fields of color by letting the paint bleed into, or stain, untreated canvas. “I have a saying: Pollock dripped, Frankenthaler poured,” he told The Washington Post in 2011, referring to the artist Helen Frankenthaler. “Morris Louis poured. Howard Mehring sprinkled. I blot.” In his first stained series, “Mandala,” color radiated from a circular central image. The nearly 100 paintings in his “Disk” series, which he called “a matrix for exploiting color,” consisted of a central circle and two triangles positioned at the corners of the canvas. Over the next decade he moved to hard-edge geometric zigzags and stripes in the vertical “Upstart” series, color grids and shaped canvases that allowed for more complex experiments in form and color relations. He also made welded steel sculptures and, in the “Quad” series of the 1980s, collaged photographs. “Reed was, in a sense, the ‘little master’ of that first batch of Washington colorists,” the critic Benjamin Forgey wrote in The Washington Post in 1997. “He was a latecomer — he didn’t turn seriously to painting until he was in his mid-30s — but he never considered becoming anything other than an abstract painter. And when he was ready to show, in his early 40s, he was a very good abstract painter indeed.” Mr. Reed gave himself a more modest assessment in an interview with NPR last year. “I’m sort of low man on the totem pole of that group of six,” he said. Paul Allen...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Dover
By James Twitty
Located in Dallas, TX
Signed "Twitty" at lower right
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Acrylic, Linen

Colorful Abstract painting by Arnold Weber 1968
Located in Long Island City, NY
Artist: Arnold Weber, American (1931 - 2010) Title: Colorful Abstract Year: 1968 Medium: Oil on Canvas, Signed, titled and dated l.l. Size: 32 x 44 in. (81.28 x 111.76 cm)
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil

Dichotos - Historic Yellow and Red Geometric Abstract Oil Painting
Located in New York, NY
Martin Canin's Dichotos is a large 60 x 50 geometric abstract oil painting, dating 1967. Martin Canin’s work can be linked to two 1960s movements: Color field and Op Art. Like many a...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Abstraction 1966
Located in Buffalo, NY
A modern abstract geometric oil painting by American female artist Irene Zevon who lived and worked in the Chelsea Hotel in the 1950's and 1960's.
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil

Study in Counterpoint, Large Geometric Abstract Painting by Kes Zapkus
By Kes Zapkus
Located in Long Island City, NY
Kestutis Edward Zapkus was born in Lithuania in 1938. He was predominantly influenced creatively by the Abstract Expressionist movement in Post War New York. Zapkus soon immigrated t...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Untitled
Located in New York, NY
DANIEL GORSKI Untitled, 1964 Acrylic on canvas mounted on board 90 x 90 inches
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic, Board

Untitled
Located in New York, NY
DANIEL GORSKI Untitled, 1963 Acrylic on canvas (Diptych) 80 x 45 inches
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Sentinel #1
Located in New York, NY
DANIEL GORSKI Sentinel #1, 1964 Acrylic on canvas 85 x 23 inches
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Abstract Geometric abstract paintings for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Abstract Geometric abstract paintings 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 abstract paintings created in this style to introduce contrast in an otherwise neutral space in your home, the works available on 1stDibs include elements of blue, purple, orange, red and other colors. Many Pop art paintings were created by popular artists on 1stDibs, including Claudia Fauth, Melisa Taylor Metzger, Natalia Roman, and Clifford Singer. Frequently made by artists working with Paint, and Synthetic Resin Paint and other materials, all of these pieces for sale are unique and have attracted attention over the years. Not every interior allows for large Abstract Geometric abstract paintings, so small editions measuring 0.1 inches across are also available.

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