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James Rosenquist
Above

1981

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  • Gloster Heming, Vote For Women
    By Robert Indiana
    Located in San Francisco, CA
    Artist: Robert Indiana (American, born 1928) Title: Gloster Heming, Vote For Women Year: 1977 Medium: Color lithograph Edition: Numbered 67/150 in penci...
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  • Fly
    By James Rosenquist
    Located in San Francisco, CA
    This artwork titled "Fly" 1981 is an original color lithograph on Arches paper by renown American artist James Rosenquist, 1933-2017. It is hand signed, dated, titled and numbered P....
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    Late 20th Century Pop Art Abstract Prints

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  • Allied Chemical Tower, Packed, Project for Number 1 Time Square New York
    Located in San Francisco, CA
    This artwork titled ' Allied Chemical Tower, Packed, Project for Number 1 Time Square, New York" 1971, in an original color lithograph on Arjomari paper by renown Bulgarian/American ...
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    Late 20th Century Pop Art Abstract Prints

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  • Darryl Pottorf Exceptional Print – Truck Stop de Marra Kech
    By Darryl Pottorf
    Located in San Francisco, CA
    This impressive 12 color screenprint is by Darryl Pottorf (1952- ) The print is titled “Truck Stop de Marra Kech”. It was printed and published in 2000 by Gemini G.E.L. the well-kno...
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    Early 2000s Pop Art Abstract Prints

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  • Landscape 1 from 11 Pop Artists Series
    By Allan D'Arcangelo 1
    Located in San Francisco, CA
    This artwork titled "Landscape 1 from 11 Pop Artists Series" is an original screen print by American artist Allan D'Arcangelo, 1930-1998. It is signed,...
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    Late 20th Century Pop Art Abstract Prints

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  • Why You Can Tell #2
    By Robert Rauschenberg
    Located in San Francisco, CA
    This artwork titled "Why You Can Tell #2" from the suite "Nine Prints" is an original serigraph with offset lithograph and collage on Wove paper by American artist Robert Rauschenberg, 1925-2008. It is hand signed and numbered 36/100 in pencil by the artist. Published by Multiples, New York and Printed by Styria Studio, New York. With the blind stamp of the printer at lower left corner. The sheet size is 22.75 x 30 inches, framed is 43 x 34.25 inches. This particular artwork is held in several museums, including the Museum of Modern Art, New York. It is beautifully framed in a wooden gold frame, with fabric matting and color bevel. About the artist. Born in Port Arthur, Texas in 1925, Robert Rauschenberg imagined himself first as a minister and later as a pharmacist. It wasn't until 1947, while in the U.S. Marines, that he discovered his aptitude for drawing and his interest in the artistic representation of everyday objects and people. After leaving the Marines, he studied art in Paris on the G.I. Bill, but quickly became disenchanted with the European art scene. Rauschenberg's enthusiasm for popular culture and his rejection of the angst and seriousness of the Abstract Expressionists led him to search for a new way of painting. He found his signature mode by embracing materials traditionally outside of the artist's reach. He would cover a canvas with house paint, or ink the wheel of a car and run it over paper to create a drawing, while demonstrating rigor and concern for formal painting. By 1958, at the time of his first solo exhibition at the Leo Castelli Gallery, his work had moved from abstract painting to drawings like "Erased De Kooning" (1953) (which was exactly as it sounds) to what he termed "combines." These combines (meant to express both the finding and forming of combinations in three-dimensional collage) cemented his place in art history. As Pop Art emerged in the 1960s, Rauschenberg turned away from three-dimensional combines and began to work in two dimensions, using magazine...
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    Late 20th Century Pop Art Abstract Prints

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    Mixed Media

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  • F-111 (Castelli Gallery Poster)
    By James Rosenquist
    Located in Hinsdale, IL
    ROSENQUIST, JAMES (1933 - 2017) F-111 (Castelli Gallery Poster) Offset Lithograph c. 1965 Signed and dated in pencil along lower edge Sheet Size: 28” x 22”, Fresh ...
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  • "Ten Days" limited edition lithograph by James Rosenquist
    By James Rosenquist
    Located in Hinsdale, IL
    JAMES ROSENQUIST "Ten Days, from The New York Collection for Stockholm" Lithograph in colors on paper,1973 9 x 12 inches (22.9 x 30.5 cm) (sheet) Ed. 114/300 Signed, numbered, and d...
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  • "Woman in the Sun" by James Rosenquist, 1991
    By James Rosenquist
    Located in Hinsdale, IL
    JAMES ROSENQUIST (B. 1933) "Woman in the Sun" 15 color lithograph from aluminum plate on mould-made paper, white Rives BFK, 1991 Catalog #225 She...
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    1990s Pop Art Abstract Prints

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  • Ice Point
    By James Rosenquist
    Located in Ljubljana, SI
    Ice Point. Original color lithograph, 1983. Edition of 150 signed and numbered impressions on Arches paper. Art and Sport portfolio: The Yugoslav Olympic Committee of the Winter Olympic Games Sarajevo...
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    1980s Pop Art Abstract Prints

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  • Flag III /// Pop Art Jasper Johns Abstract Lithograph America Minimalism ULAE
    By Jasper Johns
    Located in Saint Augustine, FL
    Artist: (after) Jasper Johns (American, 1930-) Title: "Flag III" Series: Facsimile Catalogue of Jasper Johns Prints *Issued unsigned Year: 1975 Med...
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  • Large Bus by Allen Jones classic British 1960s pop art in bright primary colors
    By Allen Jones
    Located in New York, NY
    This large Allen Jones lithograph is printed exuberantly in primary colors. A swath of bright red brushstrokes represents the side of a bus. In the upper left, small windows reveal the passengers: a woman’s face is cut off above her vampy red lips, and a blue-haired man’s face is hidden. Royal blue fills the upper right corner of the composition, giving the impression of looking up at a passing bus against the cloudless sky. One can imagine Jones was thinking of the iconic red double decker bus the AEC Routemaster, first introduced in London in 1954. In the 1960s buses were a living symbol of familiar and new technology coexisting: as David Bucken put it, “In and around London a midpoint change on a journey might involve alighting from an RT bus, of which production had started just prior to World War II, and getting on one of the sexy new Routemasters.” In the artist’s words: “The whole problem as a figurative artist was that it was going against the main march of modernism, which was towards abstraction. But here was a way of making the subject you were painting the same as the object you were painting on. By making the canvas a rhomboid, and putting little wheels on it, you have a schematic version of a vehicle, in this case a London bus.” Jones plays with the space between abstraction and figuration: windowed passengers, elaborated with just a few lines and placed adjacent to a weighty red ground of brushstrokes, easily convey the form of a bus, yet the print also conveys Jones’ visceral, painterly delight in color play. Four color lithograph on wove paper Paper 28.5 x 42.5 / 72.4 X 108 cm Wood frame 31 x 46 x 2 in. / 78.75 x 117 x 5 cm with 1 in. moulding Signed by the artist lower right in pencil, labeled Trial Proof lower left in pencil. Edition 20. Printed at Tamarind Los Angeles with Clifford Smith...
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    1960s Pop Art Abstract Prints

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