Skip to main content
1 of 4

Gail Stoicheff
Oil Painting "Babes" by Gail Stoicheff, Framed.

2013

You May Also Like
  • Untitled
    By Nicolas Cuellar
    Located in New York, NY
    Hand-signed and dated "Cuellar 98" top center
    Category

    1990s Contemporary Figurative Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Archival Paper

  • Untitled
    By Shirley Goldfarb
    Located in New York, NY
    SHIRLEY GOLDFARB Untitled, 1962 oil on paper 8 x 5 inches 20.3 x 12.7 cm 8 x 5 1/4 inches Signed lower right: SG Signed and dated verso: Shirley Goldfarb '62
    Category

    20th Century Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Paper, Oil

  • Sunset over the River
    By Albert Bierstadt, 1830-1902
    Located in New York, NY
    Monogrammed lower right: AB
    Category

    Mid-19th Century Hudson River School Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Paper, Oil, Board

  • I (Urban Hieroglyphics Series)
    Located in New Orleans, LA
    Born in New Orleans, Horton Humble is a self-taught American painter. His debut show in 2007, entitled Debris, featured a series of paintings using wood from the Hurricane Katrina wreckage centered on themes of a lost city and water as a powerful force. In 2008, he embarked on a one-year journey through Africa for his next series Transit Urban, which included twelve paintings using local traditional fabrics depicting the energy of the people, land and culture. Each piece was drafted on site and later accompanied him on his other travels from Europe to US. Enchanted by the old and mestizo city, he returned to Lisbon in 2012 where he lived for almost three years and created The Lisbon Series influenced by the discovery of a new medium; ceramics and its modeling techniques. After this productive period in Portugal, Humble again returned home and established his studio with a group of fellow artists in New Orleans and co-founded the Level Artist Collective in 2015. At this time, his paintings on wood panels captured his impressions of a post- Katrina city represented inside of human head figures transitioning his previous subject matter into a new territory (US) and its social problematic. In 2017, Horton Humble was a resident artist at the Joan Mitchell Center in New Orleans and named “one of the most talented young painters producing in the South today” by Bradley Sumrall, curator of the Ogden Museum of Southern Art (Curator's Choice, Country Roads Magazine). Through the summer he created his first public sculpture in steel, The Guardian, commissioned by the Helis Foundation for the Pyodras Corridor project- Sculpture for New Orleans. Currently, Humble is creating his most ambitious work, large-scale canvases in which he is releasing the formality of his detail obsession into a more dynamic and expressive work. Horton Humble is a founding member of LEVEL Collective and was a 2015/2017 nominee for the United States Artists Fellowship. His works are included in public and private collections, showcased at the Poydras Corridor, LA; Prizm Art Fair, FL; Atlanta Contemporary Biennial, GA; Ohr-O`Keefe Museum of Art, MS; Luciano´s...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Acrylic, Ink, Archival Paper

  • Reef Painting #5
    By Melinda Hackett
    Located in New Orleans, LA
    Hackett’s paintings defy popular convention. They are not figurative, decorative, representative, or even completely abstract. While it is hard to tie them to any one style or movement, they manage to be a part of all of them. Hackett’s work is influenced by pattern, midcentury design, art of indigenous peoples, and the art and craft movement, combined with a loose examination of the natural world. She creates a visual environment that is both recognizable yet strangely mysterious. While steeped in art history and influenced by a range of artists from Miro to Arthur Dove, Charles Burchfield, Agnes Pelton, Florine Stettheimer...
    Category

    2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Archival Paper

  • Fishy
    By Melinda Hackett
    Located in New Orleans, LA
    Hackett’s paintings defy popular convention. They are not figurative, decorative, representative, or even completely abstract. While it is hard to tie them to any one style or movement, they manage to be a part of all of them. Hackett’s work is influenced by pattern, midcentury design, art of indigenous peoples, and the art and craft movement, combined with a loose examination of the natural world. She creates a visual environment that is both recognizable yet strangely mysterious. While steeped in art history and influenced by a range of artists from Miro to Arthur Dove, Charles Burchfield, Agnes Pelton, Florine Stettheimer...
    Category

    2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Archival Paper

    Fishy
    Price Upon Request

Recently Viewed

View All