Skip to main content
1 of 4

André Pierre
Andre Pierre (Haitian, 1914-2005) "Immanou" Unframed Oil on Board Painting

$20,000List Price

You May Also Like

Antique American Folk Art Dog Man Woods Oil Painting Original Frame Gold 19th C.
Located in Buffalo, NY
An antique American folk art painting in its original period frame. Featuring a man walking his dogs in the woods with a stunning s...
Category

1890s Folk Art Landscape Paintings

Materials

Oil, Board

Most of my dreams are about sleeping
By Mike Maxwell
Located in Santa Monica, CA
Oil on board
Category

2010s Outsider Art Figurative Paintings

Materials

Oil, Board

African House
Located in Metairie, LA
Clementine Hunter, African House This is an excellent example of Hunter’s work, featuring the iconic African House. Three figures are present in the work, a boy, a girl, and an elde...
Category

1960s Folk Art Figurative Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil, Board, Pencil

"Denkbilder, " Mixed-Media Sculpture, 2021
Located in Chicago, IL
To Chicago-based artist Patrick Fitzgerald, his miniature car sculptures are a means of traveling through time. Born from a fascination with the soap box derby cars of his youth, eac...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Outsider Art Mixed Media

Materials

Oil, Acrylic, Cardboard, Canvas, Mixed Media

Pastry chef food cooking theme sweet color figure resembles delicious cakes
By Stephen Basso
Located in Brooklyn, NY
This painting is inspires by the painting of chaim soutine pastry chefs.
Category

2010s Outsider Art Figurative Paintings

Materials

Oil, Board

The Happy Inlaw, Oil Painting
By Maurice Kish
Located in Surfside, FL
The imagery of Maurice Kish (1895-1987), whether factories or carousels, reliably subverts expectations. His vision hovers just around the unraveling edge of things, where what is solid and clear becomes ambiguous. He is fascinated, often delighted, by the falling apart. This unexpected, fresh perspective results in oddly affecting pictures of a now long-gone New York. Born Moishe in a town called Dvinsk, Russia (what is now Daugavpils, Latvia), Kish came with his family to New York when he was in his teens. The family settled in Brownsville, and for the rest of Kish’s life Brooklyn remained his home, though he moved from one neighborhood to another. He was close to his parents, who recognized his talent and supported his desire to become an artist. Kish attended the National Academy of Design as well as Cooper Union. His fellow students included many other immigrants and children of immigrants who were particularly receptive to the Modernism coming from Europe. As his career progressed, Kish himself applied different strains of Modernism to different purposes. For him, the story was held above all else. For years, Kish used the skills he acquired in art school to earn his living at a Manhattan glass...
Category

20th Century Folk Art Figurative Paintings

Materials

Oil, Board

Recently Viewed

View All