
Solo Dance
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Young Mi KimSolo Dance2017
2017
$3,160List Price
About the Item
- Creator:Young Mi Kim (Korean)
- Creation Year:2017
- Dimensions:Height: 20.87 in (53 cm)Width: 15.36 in (39 cm)
- Medium:
- Movement & Style:
- Period:
- Condition:
- Gallery Location:New York, NY
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU68332971131
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provocative female figure
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Tom Bennett’s practice is rooted in the classical tradition where painting and drawing from life is highly regarded. Bennett’s work is heavily influenced by Francis Bacon, Frank Auberbauch and foremost his father, Harry Bennett, who was also an artist. Tom’s time living abroad in Spain and traveling through Eastern Europe and Africa provided the artistic freedom to explore many of the techniques and subject matter that continue to define his practice. Bennett was born and raised in Connecticut.
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Robert Beauchamp, American (1923-1995)
Untitled
Hand signed lower right, titled verso.
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Robert Beauchamp (1923 – March 1995) was an American figurative painter and arts educator. Beauchamp's paintings and drawings are known for depicting dramatic creatures and figures with expressionistic colors. His work was described in the New York Times as being "both frightening and amusing,". He was a Guggenheim Fellow and a student of Hans Hofmann.
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He was told he was good at drawing, and replaced study hall classes with art classes, receiving instruction and inspiration from a Welsh teacher named R. Idris Thomas. While in high school Beauchamp would go, every Monday, to the public library and a local museum where he would read books about art; specifically French painting, as assigned by Thomas. Beauchamp absorbed the tenets of European Modernism and American Abstract Expressionism—with which he eventually broke. While abstraction, with its focus on color and form, underlies his compositions, he filled canvas and paper with psychologically acute portraits of himself and others, nudes, animals, and objects of all kinds. Beauchamp would spend upwards of four hours a day in the art room and eventually won the Carter Memorial Prize, which provided a scholarship to the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center. At Colorado Springs he studied under Boardman Robinson, painting landscapes in nature.
Beauchamp eventually joined the Navy and then returned to Colorado Springs to continue his studies. Traveling the world as an Armed Guard, he spent a year and a half at sea and the rest of the three years in San Francisco. Seeking to make money, and to follow his love for a girl, Beauchamp decided to attend Cranbrook Academy of Art from 1947–1948. There he studied pottery, believing one could "make more money selling pots than you could selling paintings." He described his experience at Cranbrook as intimidating and claustrophobic, and eventually switched to sculpture before switching to painting.
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Robert Beauchamp was born in Denver, Colorado in 1923. He had three brothers and three sisters, and the children were orphaned by both parents by the time Beauchamp was three. The family grew up impoverished due to the Great Depression, living in a community house with other families. As a child he dabbled in art but it wasn't until high school that he began taking art classes. When not creating art he also played sports; football and basketball, and enjoyed chemistry and geology.
He was told he was good at drawing, and replaced study hall classes with art classes, receiving instruction and inspiration from a Welsh teacher named R. Idris Thomas. While in high school Beauchamp would go, every Monday, to the public library and a local museum where he would read books about art; specifically French painting, as assigned by Thomas. Beauchamp absorbed the tenets of European Modernism and American Abstract Expressionism—with which he eventually broke. While abstraction, with its focus on color and form, underlies his compositions, he filled canvas and paper with psychologically acute portraits of himself and others, nudes, animals, and objects of all kinds. Beauchamp would spend upwards of four hours a day in the art room and eventually won the Carter Memorial Prize, which provided a scholarship to the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center. At Colorado Springs he studied under Boardman Robinson, painting landscapes in nature.
Beauchamp eventually joined the Navy and then returned to Colorado Springs to continue his studies. Traveling the world as an Armed Guard, he spent a year and a half at sea and the rest of the three years in San Francisco. Seeking to make money, and to follow his love for a girl, Beauchamp decided to attend Cranbrook Academy of Art from 1947–1948. There he studied pottery, believing one could "make more money selling pots than you could selling paintings." He described his experience at Cranbrook as intimidating and claustrophobic, and eventually switched to sculpture before switching to painting.
Beauchamp moved to New York City in the early 1950s and was involved in the Tenth Street galleries, which provided outlets for more experimental artists and the second generation of abstract expressionists. Despite his involvement with 10th Street and friendships with abstract artists, abstract art never interested in him. He showed at numerous galleries in New York and Provincetown, socializing with gallery owners, artists and collectors. His first exhibition was at the Tanager Gallery in New York, he also showed during the 1950s at the Hansa Gallery. In New York and Provincetown he studied under Hans Hofmann Eventually he felt that abstract expressionism became dull and stalemated.
During the 1960s he showed at the Green Gallery. C. 1960 he was awarded a Fulbright Award allowing him to travel to La Romola, Italy. He traveled frequently to cities such as Rome and worked constantly. Beauchamp returned to the states and lived in Provincetown at Walter Gutman's house, who awarded Beauchamp a grant. That year he met his future wife, Nadine Valenti, whom he married in 1967. Beauchamp taught at a variety of schools during his lifetime including Brooklyn College, School of Visual Arts, Cooper Union and the Art Students League of New York during the last fifteen years of his life.
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By Sheila Elias
Located in Surfside, FL
Titled: Calabash Hand signed, dated and titled.
Sheila Elias (born in Chicago, Illinois) is an American artist. Her work is Neo Expressionist, Feminist Pop Art. Her works have been featured in exhibitions across North America and at the Liberty show at the Louvre Museum in Paris.
Elias graduated from the Art Institute of Chicago, lives and works in Miami, Florida and in New York City. As an artist and art historian, Elias works with the layers of life and art history, seeking in it a connection between art aesthetics and social consciousness. She has exhibited with diverse artists, Larry Rivers, Bob Stanley, Ford Crull, Sol LeWitt, Mark Tobey, Walter Darby Bannard, Clyde Butcher. Her work spans the disciplines of painting, digital mixed media, sculpture, installation and performance.
Her inspiration to be an artist began with the work that Matisse created (La Cirque) in the library of the Art Institute of Chicago. Paul Wieghardt (from the Bauhaus School in Germany), was her art teacher at SAIC. She was influenced by the Marisol, Claes Oldenburg and Jean Dubuffet. Her sculptures also reveal the influence of Andy Warhol and Robert Rauschenberg. We also have a work from her Pompidou Series (1979-1981) built around the X in the raw, exposed architecture of the Centre Georges Pompidou in the center of Paris designed by Richard Rodgers and Renzo Piano.
Select Exhibitions:
Museo Vault in Wynwood Art District, Miami
Coral Springs Museum of Art, Sheila Elias: Somewhere-Anywhere, Coral Springs, Fla.
Lila G. Martinez Gallery, Cambridge, Mass.
“Painted Pixels” Lowe Art Museum, University of Miami, FL (Solo Exhibition)
“Salon Series” The Sagamore Hotel, Miami Beach, FL (Group Exhibition)
“The Invisible Woman” Concrete Space, Doral, FL (Group Exhibition)
“eye-Pad” Silvana Facchini Gallery, Wynwood, Miami, FL
“Jewels” Buccellati, Bal Harbour, FL
“Chai Contemporary” Jewish Museum, Miami Beach, FL
“Tribute to Africa” Silvana Facchini Gallery, Wynwood, Miami, FL
The Bakehouse Art Complex, Wynwood, Miami, FL
Apple Store “iPaint on my iPad,” Chicago, IL
The Multicultural Arts Center, Cambridge, Mass.
The Napoleon Grand Salon at The Deauville Hotel, Miami Beach, Fla.
Bass Museum, "I Wanna Be Loved by You: Photographs of Marilyn Monroe," Miami Beach, Fla.
Boca Raton Museum of Art
Norton Museum of Art
Bass Museum, Miami Beach, Fla.
Jewish Museum of Florida
Kim Foster Gallery, "Beyond the Camera...," New York, NY
Silvana Facchini Gallery, "Living in Miami," Miami, Fla.
South Florida / Art Center, "Reconnect," Miami Beach, Fla.
Maryland Federation of Art, "Art on Paper 2001"
Corcoran Gallery, Annapolis, MD, juror David C. Levy
Veneto Gallery, Miami, Fla.
Margulies Taplin Gallery, Bay Harbour, Fla.
"Secret Gardens," Travelling Exhibition, Lowe Art Museum, Miami, Fla.
Public Art Program, City of Orlando, Fla.
Lowe Museum, University of Miami, Fla.
Art and Culture Center of Hollywood, Hollywood, Fla.
Bernard Biderman Gallery, New York, NY
Metro Dade Cultural Resource Center, Miami, Fla.
Huntsville Museum of Art
New England Center for Contemporary Art
San Diego Art Institute, CA
Anne Jaffe Gallery, Bay Harbour, Fla.
Ratner Gallery, Chicago, IL
Santa Monica Heritage Museum, Los Angeles, Calif.
Paula Allan Gallery, New York, NY.
Otis Parsons School of Design, "Hollywood: Portrait of the Stars" California
Louvre, Institute des Decoratifs, "Liberty: the Official Exhibitions Centenary
of the Statue of Liberty", Louvre Institut des Decoratifs, Paris, France
New York Public Library, New York, NY
Gallery Q, Tokyo, Japan
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC
New York University, Loeb Gallery, New York, NY
Riverside Art Museum, Riverside, Calif.
Danville Museum of Fine Arts, Danville, Virginia
Alex Rosenberg Gallery, New York, NY
New York University, New York, NY
Stella Polaris Gallery, Los Angeles, Calif. University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC
Pictogram Gallery, East Village, NY
California State University,Northridge, Calif.
Institute for Contemporary Arts, Korea
Focus International, "American Woman in Art", Nairobi, Kenya
Laguna Beach Museum of Art, OCCA, Long Beach, Calif.
Gallery One, Fort Worth, Texas, juror: Dr. William Otton...
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