Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 6

Susan Sharp
'Floating World' Biomorphic/Geometric Abstraction of Blue, Orange, Red, Yellow

2015

About the Item

"Floating World," Oil on 2 Panels, 48 x 49 Inches (Diptych) Abstraction in bright blue/turquoise, cream,yellow, burgundy, black yellow ochre, and green. Note: Can be installed with panels slightly separated or with no space in between the two. Susan Sharp is an outstanding abstract painter of biomorphic and linear forms, flat planes, vivid color and highly glossy surfaces who works in a wide variety of sizes on wood, mylar and paper. An intense colorist, Sharp makes fresh what artists have been challenged by for years: hand and eye spontaneously and/or deliberately coming together to create sensuous, fluid, and radiant paintings, inspired by external and inward experiences. Landscape is the primary objective inspiration for these spirited and gratifyingly fresh abstractions filled with light which are paradoxically both quickly intuitive and methodical, extremely sophisticated in their play of textures on a flat surface, and their complex integration of biomorphic and geometric forms. Sharp conveys her love of color and process inspired by nature as she brilliantly and delightfully takes chances by walking a fine line between the accidental and the controlled. Susan Sharp: "My approach to painting is intuitive and a continuing process of self discovery. Working flat, several layers of fluid paint are applied to either paper, mylar or wood panels, imbuing the works with an inner light. Scale shifts and unexpected juxtapositions combined with overlays of the linear and graphic, navigate disparate worlds. The density of the woodlands surrounding my Easton (CT) home, the weight and transparency of water as well as topographical drawings and photos done while flying are all sources of inspiration. Meandering rivers and roads, or blood vessels, translate into flowing linear connectors, land masses to body parts. The ambiguity expressed in my works is what compels me to paint." Susan Sharp’s paintings have been seen in numerous solo exhibitions in New York and Connecticut and in many group exhibitions in private galleries and public institutions nationwide including the Silvermine Art Center, the Housatonic Museum of Art, and the Stamford Museum. She is the recipient of awards from the Silvermine Arts Center, the Connecticut Commission on the Arts and the Stamford Museum. Sharp’s paintings are included in distinguished private collections as well as such public collections as the State of Connecticut, General Electric, Chase Manhattan Bank, Kidder Peabody Corporation, the Town of Fairfield, CT, Huntington Bank, Pullman & Comley and the Housatonic Museum of Art.
  • Creator:
    Susan Sharp (1942, American)
  • Creation Year:
    2015
  • Dimensions:
    Height: 48 in (121.92 cm)Width: 49 in (124.46 cm)
  • Medium:
  • Movement & Style:
  • Period:
  • Condition:
    This painting is unframed however the artist has incorporated the work onto the sides so framing is not necessary.
  • Gallery Location:
    Wellesley, MA
  • Reference Number:
    1stDibs: LU45631408643
More From This SellerView All
  • "Lit" Abstraction of blues, tan, black, deep red and cream in 2 panels
    By Susan Sharp
    Located in Wellesley, MA
    "Lit," Oil and Acrylic on 2 Panels, 48 x 61 Inches (Diptych) Abstraction in shades of blue, tan, red, yellow ochre, green, black and white. This painting is on 2 panels which can ...
    Category

    2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Acrylic, Wood Panel

  • "Liminal" Horizontal abstraction in yellow, tan, orange, brown, black, blues
    By Susan Sharp
    Located in Wellesley, MA
    "Liminal," Oil on 3 Panels, 25.5 x 60 Inches (Triptych). Abstraction in shades of tan, brown, orange, blue, yellow and black. This painting consists of 3 panels which can be insta...
    Category

    2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Wood Panel

  • "Tumble and Stir" Abstraction in blues, green, burgundy, white, black
    By Susan Sharp
    Located in Wellesley, MA
    "Tumble and Stir," Oil and Acrylic on 2 Panels, 37 x 49 Inches (Diptych). Abstraction in shades of blue, white, green, burgundy, and black. This painting consists of 2 panels which...
    Category

    2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Acrylic, Wood Panel

  • "Birds of a Feather" Abstraction tan, white, chartreuse, yellow, turquoise, red
    By Susan Sharp
    Located in Wellesley, MA
    "Birds of a Feather," Oil and Acrylic on 2 Panels, 48 x 60 Inches (Diptych). Abstraction in white, tan, yellow, cream, orange, burgundy, green and deep blue. This painting consists ...
    Category

    2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Acrylic, Wood Panel

  • "Silent Stream" Abstraction in shades of gray, burgundy, blue, white, brown
    By Susan Sharp
    Located in Wellesley, MA
    "Silent Stream," Oil on 2 Wood Panels, 48 x 36 Inches (Diptych) Abstraction in shades of gray, burgundy, white, black, blue and orange. This painting consists of 2 panels which can...
    Category

    2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Wood Panel

  • 'Unraveled' Abstract Geometric Wall Piece Wood /Paint/Textile Black/White/Grays
    By Jean Feinberg
    Located in Wellesley, MA
    ADDITIONAL PHOTOS OF THIS WORK WILL BE SENT UPON REQUEST: Jean Feinberg is a NY based artist whose wall constructions - paintings on found wood and paintings on painted plywood - a...
    Category

    2010s Abstract Geometric Mixed Media

    Materials

    Mixed Media, Gesso, Burlap, Muslin, Oil, Wood Panel

You May Also Like
  • "The Occupant" (Abstract, Black & White, Red, Bold, Floral, Text, Type, Roses)
    By Nicholas Evans
    Located in Paris, IDF
    THE OCCUPANT 2020 Paris, France A smaller work done in parallel to a complimentary piece ‘WOMBS, TOMBS, TOOLS,’ which portrays hand-painted serif typeset words ‘THE OCCUPANT.’ A ribbon of black along the base of the work hosts a line which reads: “The offices in the desert vending out futures -- if you had gotten a good one you too would want them all to know -- where our bodies have been.” The work is a commentary on the spaces we inhabit, and how they are all temporary. Paint is acrylic with the exception of the red elements, which are formed with oil paint. The painting is executed on two connected, reclaimed wood panels...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Acrylic, Wood Panel

  • "Auspice" (Abstract, Colorful, Textured Skull Painting on Antique Wood, 65x50cm)
    By Nicholas Evans
    Located in Paris, IDF
    AUSPICE 2020 Paris, France An auspice is a ‘prophetic sign’ which the artist was inspired by. This textured, abstract piece features a lying skull, looking up to the sky...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    India Ink, Oil, Acrylic, Wood Panel

  • Tributaries Abstract River Oil Cold Wax Original Bonnie Zahn Griffith Painting
    Located in Whitefish, MT
    "Tributaries" by Bonnie Zahn Griffith, Oil and Cold Wax Medium on Wood Panel, 18" x 18" unframed, 20" x 20" framed in a modern black frame with hanging wire included. Known for her p...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Expressionist Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Gold Leaf

  • Wonderment of Otherness Quilt Painting 001 A Monument to José Esteban Muñoz
    Located in Brooklyn, NY
    This work is from the Wonderment of Otherness series of paintings by New York City-based artist Christopher Stout, whose pronouns are he/him or inclusive they/them. Each work within the Wonderment of Otherness series is a sculptural monochrome painting and is part of the contemporary genre of art referred to as queer abstraction. A statement of practice regarding all of Christopher Stout’s work is that it intends to surround us with the notion of radical joy and a vision of queerness as found in our imaginations. But what do the term queer abstraction mean and represent? In the artist’s own words: “I would suggest that queer abstraction might be most easily defined as activist art about the queer experience that does not employ representation of the human figure. Queer abstraction, along with Black abstraction, feminist abstraction, and even Arte povera are examples of 4 distinct types of sociopolitical protest work birthed in the late 1960s and early 1970s, which primarily eschew the use of figuration. In providing additional context, art critic and curator Eric Sutphin theorizes that contemporary artists practicing queer abstraction, 'are in close dialogue with their forbears, and bring to the milieu of queer abstraction a new set of social, economic, and political concerns…including a series of questions: What is the relationship between queerness and formalism? Without explicit political references, how can abstract work transmit the urgency of its content?'” In returning the conversation to the Wonderment of Otherness paintings, each painting in this body of work has been designated as a 'quilt painting' because the central visual element and topography of the works are textile pieces of Belgian linen and cotton sewn together with wire in a manner akin to quilting. It should be noted that quilting here is not a reference to the AIDS quilt, but rather an extension of the tradition of quilting as a form of political art by marginalized people. These quilts are stretched on stacks of wooden panels, so that the works retain elements to suggest being textile pieces, and also elements of being sculptures, and also elements of being paintings. This is a reference to the nonbinary. An equally important concentration within these works is to express a linear relationship between queer abstraction and queer theory. Alongside each painting has been designated a notable academic text, biography, or resource book documenting a spectrum of queer ideas and experiences. Stout noted that, “Some of these books are longtime friends, and some of the more contemporary works were read as part of my research for these paintings.” Whilst these paintings are not designed to illustrate the work of these queer academics, they do hope to activate a through line, manifesting the shared goals within queer abstraction. This painting is titled, Wonderment of Otherness Quilt Painting 001, A Monument to the Work and Queer Personhood of José Esteban Muñoz (which is slightly longer than the 80 characters permitted in the online catalog) and is a monument to the work and Queer personhood of José Esteban Muñoz. Stout painted this piece after re-reading Muñoz’s text, “Cruising Utopia, The Then and There of Queer Futility.” A much-loved quote from this book: “Queerness is not yet here. Queerness is an ideality. Put another way, we are not yet queer. We may never touch queerness, but we can feel it as the warm illumination of a horizon imbued with potentiality. We have never been queer, yet queerness exists for us as an ideality that can be distilled from the past and used to imagine a future. The future is queerness’s domain. Queerness is a structuring and educated mode of desiring that allows us to see and feel beyond the quagmire of the present. The here and now is a prison house. We must strive, in the face of the here and now’s totalizing rendering of reality, to think and feel a then and there. Some will say that all we have are the pleasures of this moment, but we must never settle for that minimal transport; we must dream and enact new and better pleasures, other ways of being in the world, and ultimately new worlds, queerness is a longing that propels us onward, beyond romances for the negative and toiling in the present, queerness is that thing that lets us feel that this world is not enough, that indeed something is missing. Often we can glimpse the worlds proposed and promised by queerness in the realm of the aesthetic. The aesthetic, especially the queer aesthetic, frequently contains blueprints and schemata of a forward-dawning futurity. Both the ornamental and the quotidian can contain a map of the utopia that is Queerness.” ― José Esteban Muñoz ... Process: Stacked wooden panels, on which is stretched a quilt that I fashioned from Belgian linen and cotton fabric sewn together with wire. The finished work is a monochrome painted...
    Category

    2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Enamel, Wire

  • Liminal #2 - Medium Abstract Painting
    By Chris Gwaltney
    Located in Newport Beach, CA
    Balancing between abstraction and figurative, the works of Chris Gwaltney (b. 1953) are evocative, luminous, and lush. He balances color with unexpected washes and scribbles; scrapin...
    Category

    2010s Abstract Expressionist Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Linen, Oil Pastel, Oil, Wood Panel

  • It Blooms After the Rain
    By Amrta Art
    Located in Los Angeles, CA
    This piece is part of the Amrta Gold Series. These pieces are incredibly unique and cannot be replicated. The are multilayered mixed media abstracts all with 24k gold leaf on top. Th...
    Category

    2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Gold Leaf

Recently Viewed

View All