Items Similar to Cardinal, monochromatic bird image on reverse glass w gold leaf
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 2
Audrey AnastasiCardinal, monochromatic bird image on reverse glass w gold leaf2020
2020
About the Item
This small-scale, intimate painting could be a Hanukkah or Christmas gift. There is no charge for the frame.
Audrey Frank Anastasi is a prolific a visual artist, curator, gallerist, educator, philanthropist, and arts advocate. She works primarily in 2-dimensional mediums: painting, drawing, collage, mixed media, focusing on the human subject. Most of Ms. Anastasi's figurative works are painted with her non-dominant left hand. She has created large bodies of works of birds, animals and birch trees.
She has exhibited in over 20 solo & 200 group shows. Her original “ref-u-gee” series of forced-migration–themed artwork was shown in a solo exhibition from October, 2022 through January, 2023 at the Brooklyn College library gallery in collaboration with the Valentine Museum of Art (VMoA.) Accompanying the show, a limited-edition monograph with over 180 images of passport sized paintings, four 8 foot tall works on panels, and a foreword by Phyllis Braff. The book was printed in 2023 by SIZ Industria Grafica, Verona, Italy.
Additional book and catalog publications include "Stations of the Cross", SPQR press, with an essay by Amir Bey, BREUCKELEN magazine, “Audrey Frank Anastasi” catalog with an essay by renowned feminist art critic Cindy Nemser, and "Collage" with an essay by Giancarlo T. Roma.
Born in a predominantly Jewish suburb of Baltimore, Maryland, Audrey was always drawn to art. Her parents had an innate sense of style. Her father's side of the family were immigrant merchants. They owned what was called, in those days, a junior department store. Audrey’s father would arrange creative window displays. And he was a snappy dresser, looking surprisingly elegant in his patterned or pastel sports jackets.
Audrey’s mother, on the other hand, came from a more rural upbringing. Although her maternal grandmother was from Eastern Europe, her maternal grandfather was born in the USA. “Mr. Jew Arthur,” as he was referred to by locals, owned a tavern in a predominantly African-American community, Fairfield, Maryland. Not only did he sell spirits, he definitely partook of them, as well. While still a teenager, Audrey’s mother, Rose Gussie, changed her name to Joyce and headed to Atlanta, Georgia, and later to New York City to be a cosmetician and hosiery model. She also had an impeccable sense of style. And in her picture albums, beside the photographs, were pages upon pages of charming ink drawings of stylish ladies. Of her own formative years, Audrey expresses, “I'm forever grateful that when I was a child, my mother indulged me with regular outings to the library where I emerged with armloads of books, and weekly visits to the Baltimore Museum of Art. There I would pass the gorgeous bust of Queen Nefertiti and the scary mummies on the way to my art lessons. There isn't a single moment of my conscious life when I didn't think of myself as an artist.” Audrey also studied with a local artist, “Miss Mary,” who soon asked Audrey to become a teaching assistant, instructing other students how to observe shapes and tonalities, while faithfully drawing charcoal drawings of classical plaster casts.
Despite being an honors student, there were no plans for Audrey to attend college. Her art teacher at Southwest High School in Miami Florida, Miss Violet, intervened to help Audrey apply for a full scholarship, which she was awarded. Attending the University of Miami, and seeing graduate students at work in their very own painting studios, opened up the next chapter. Audrey continued academic pursuits, earning her Master of Fine Arts degree at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York, which has remained her home ever since. At that time, as a photography minor, Audrey composed her large figurative paintings with a camera, and incorporated aspects of photorealism.
In 1990, while teaching anatomy for artists at Parsons School of Design, Audrey challenged herself by adopting an exercise that she had given to her students, into her own practice. She started painting with her non-dominant left hand. She feels that the shift in her approach facilitated some of her most creative breakthroughs. “By relinquishing tight control, making the mark became an act of surrender, and it liberated me.” The paintings of that period were seen by renowned feminist art critic, Cindy Nemser, who wrote an essay about the series. They became life-long friends and colleagues. In 2007, Ms. Nemser partnered with Anastasi to curate a revival exhibition entitled “Women’s Work,” which featured many groundbreaking second wave feminist artists*.
As a feminist artist herself, Anastasi’s first commitment is to painting other women, the human face, and figure. Whether working with descriptive images or with the abstract use of materials, she approaches all her subjects directly and with abandon. Her series of collages were created first in the presence of a model, working quickly, in charcoal and pastel, and again, later, alone, furiously tearing and pasting images from magazines, various language newspapers, print publications, and previous drawings. “In this way, both in theme and technique, I am working at the intersection of disciplined control and randomized instinct. Observational drawing coexists with selected patterns, colors, and images from media, assembled and pasted down like broad swaths of paint.” The title of the series, EnSamblage, is an invented word referring to both a musical ensemble of parts, and a visual assemblage of elements.
Ms. Anastasi's collage series was first exhibited at Welancora Gallery, Brooklyn, in May, 2019. In 2018, ten paintings were exhibited in "Painting to Survive," curated by Yale critic Jonathan Weinberg.
In regard to her practice, Ms. Anastasi says, “Most of the techniques I have developed derive from my desire to reach a truth, to bypass left-brain, self-conscious inhibitions, in the process of expression. In 1990, I felt artistically ‘reborn’ when I started painting with my non-dominant left hand and discovered renewed creative freedom. Additionally, I started working at breakneck speed, employing oversize brushes, to cover twenty square feet of canvas, often in less than 4 hours with images from life, of fully representational, and somewhat detailed subjects. With the more recent utilization of collage materials, I am again, re-energized to incorporate the physical materials that represent constant over-stimulation and media bombardment of contemporary times, contrasted with the directly observed presentation of a human subject.”
Audrey’s artwork is in numerous private and public collections. In 2005, with her husband, Joseph Anastasi, she founded Tabla Rasa Gallery in Sunset Park, Brooklyn. Ms. Anastasi continues to serve on the Board of Directors of the Brooklyn Arts Council and Hook Arts Media, formerly Dance Theatre Etcetera. Audrey Anastasi is also President Emeritus of Brooklyn Waterfront Artists Coalition, and continues to support their work providing opportunity and a stellar venue for the artists of Brooklyn to exhibit their artwork.
- Creator:Audrey Anastasi (American)
- Creation Year:2020
- Dimensions:Height: 10 in (25.4 cm)Width: 8 in (20.32 cm)
- Medium:
- Movement & Style:
- Period:
- Condition:
- Gallery Location:Brooklyn, NY
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU1339113547492
About the Seller
5.0
Gold Seller
These expertly vetted sellers are highly rated and consistently exceed customer expectations.
Established in 2005
1stDibs seller since 2020
84 sales on 1stDibs
Typical response time: 2 hours
- ShippingRetrieving quote...Ships From: Brooklyn, NY
- Return PolicyA return for this item may be initiated within 7 days of delivery.
More From This SellerView All
- Eying the Om, colorful imaginative mixed media, woman antelope, eyes, rabbitBy Jenny TothLocated in Brooklyn, NYKnown for painting fantastical, anxiety-ridden narrative scenes with a touch of humor, Jenny Toth works from direct observation, sometimes with the aid of elaborate set-ups and props...Category
2010s Feminist Mixed Media
MaterialsMixed Media, Acrylic, Archival Paper
- Cow, abstracted cow soft blue, whiteLocated in Brooklyn, NYBold abstract animal work, simple shapes, blue tones, by NYC based designer/artist Fredda ToneCategory
2010s Contemporary Animal Paintings
MaterialsCanvas, Acrylic
- Belly Energy, colorful nude in mirror w animals elephant lionBy Jenny TothLocated in Brooklyn, NYThis is an oil painting done from life with a woman looking in the mirror with energy radiating from her belly and looking like she has an ...Category
2010s Contemporary Figurative Paintings
MaterialsCanvas, Acrylic
- I'm Going to Calm the Hell DownBy C. DimitriLocated in Brooklyn, NYEnergetic, joyous brushstrokes in this painterly abstraction with birds. Bright colors, dominant whites, blues, with touches of orange and red. Multi-layered oil paint and painted...Category
2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings
MaterialsMixed Media, Oil, Wood Panel
- Chicken, lyrical wild bright humorous colorful abstract gestureLocated in Brooklyn, NYBold combination of abstract and gestural styles by NYC based designer/artist Fredda Tone Reminiscent of Clifford Stills, Robert Motherwell styleCategory
2010s Abstract Expressionist Abstract Paintings
MaterialsCanvas, Acrylic
- Kuan Yin, Goddess of Compassion, mythical, spiritual, acrylic banner painting.By Janet MorganLocated in Brooklyn, NYAcrylic on theatrical backdrop muslin, can be rolled, rod pockets top and bottom for hanging. This painting was featured at the Parliament of World Religions in Toronto in 2018. Kuan Yin...Category
2010s Symbolist Figurative Paintings
MaterialsAcrylic, Fabric
You May Also Like
- Impotent and aggressive 2010, canvas, mixed media, 140x120 cmLocated in Riga, LVImpotent and aggressive 2010, canvas, mixed media, 140x120 cm Juris Utāns (1959-2022) was a Latvian painter. Worked in the field of critical realism...Category
Early 2000s Contemporary Animal Paintings
MaterialsGold Leaf
- Inside n.9 - collaborative geometric birds floral colourful mixed media artworkBy Keng Wai Lee & Marco AraldiLocated in London, GBThis piece consists of 9 smaller paintings, each sized 39 x 39 cm The collaboration between Keng Wai Lee and Marco Araldi is based on the contrast between the techniques used. Marco...Category
2010s Contemporary Animal Paintings
MaterialsGold Leaf
- Aurum 11 - Flowers Birds Contemporary Gold Realism Animal PaintingBy Keng Wai Lee & Marco AraldiLocated in London, GBThe collaboration between Keng Wai Lee and Marco Araldi is based on the contrast between the techniques used. Marco uses ink pen and gold...Category
2010s Contemporary Animal Paintings
MaterialsGold Leaf
- Heliugabalus -Decorative Flowers Birds Animal Painting Gold Contemporary CirclesBy Keng Wai Lee & Marco AraldiLocated in London, GBThe collaboration between Keng Wai Lee and Marco Araldi is based on the contrast between the techniques used. Marco uses ink pen and gold...Category
2010s Contemporary Animal Paintings
MaterialsGold Leaf
- Trembling SkiesBy Thomas SwanstonLocated in Atlanta, GAThis painting is in excellent condition and has only been shown in a gallery setting. Please note that given the characteristics of the silver and gold leafing the work will photogr...Category
2010s Contemporary Landscape Paintings
MaterialsGold Leaf
- Louise - contemporary mixed media colorful hummingbird flowers framed paintingBy Keng Wai LeeLocated in London, GBKeng Wai Lee’s gorgeously rich animal impressions are a synergy of decorative tableaux and depiction in paint on canvas of his memories and imagination. “Using acrylic as a medium, I tend to reminisce through my past getting inspiration to create my artwork. This may come from remembering all my scribbles in my textbooks/school books full of monsters and machines in a apocalyptic world or just indulging in my hobbies of looking at swimming goldfish and local bird watching...Category
2010s Contemporary Animal Paintings
MaterialsGold Leaf