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Frank Stella
Hark!

1988

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  • Grey Tinted Rainbow
    By Richard Anuszkiewicz
    Located in Santa Fe, NM
    Edition on hand is HC 2/3. Printed at Graphicstudio in Florida, this combination print by Richard Anuszkiewicz was printed with a set of two other editions in 1991. This work is comp...
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    1990s Op Art Abstract Prints

    Materials

    Lithograph, Screen

  • Large Stripe Ribbon
    Located in Santa Fe, NM
    Six color lithograph with glitter element on antique white Somerset velvet paper Edition 16/20
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Figurative Prints

    Materials

    Lithograph

  • Double You
    By Matt Magee
    Located in Santa Fe, NM
    Edition of 12
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Abstract Prints

    Materials

    Lithograph

  • Green Excavation
    By Matt Magee
    Located in Santa Fe, NM
    Edition of 20
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Abstract Prints

    Materials

    Lithograph

  • Untitled RTP
    By Guy Dill
    Located in Santa Fe, NM
    Untitled RTP is a 2009 lithograph by Guy Dill. Guy Dill beautifully captures the flowing motion of abstract objects in his prints, paintings, and sculpture. Untitled RTP is signed by...
    Category

    Early 2000s Abstract Prints and Multiples

    Materials

    Lithograph

  • Proem 3
    By Matt Magee
    Located in Santa Fe, NM
    Edition of 15
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Minimalist Abstract Prints

    Materials

    Lithograph

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    Ed Paschke BAD, 1991 Silkscreen and Lithograph on Rising Mirage Paper, accompanied by documentation Pencil signed, titled "BAD", and annotated "Trial Proof" on the front 22 × 20 inches Unframed This work is a unique Trial Proof on Rising Mirage Paper, pencil signed by the artist and annotated "Trial Proof" the very first impression, aside from the regular edition. It is accompanied by the tirage sheet, with the biography of the artist and a description of the work. (see photos). As such it is a rare impression. Published by Chicago Serigraphic Workshop and Artco, Incorporated Ed Paschke Biography: Ed Paschke was born in Chicago where he spent most of his life as an important painter. He was initially associated in the late 1960s with the second generation of Chicago Imagists who called themselves The Hairy Who. He received his B.F.A. from the School of The Art Institute of Chicago in 1961 and his M.F.A. in 1970. Between degrees he lived for a time in New York where he easily came under the influence of Pop art, in part, because of his interests as a child in animation and cartoons. His fascination with the print media of popular culture led to a portrait-based art of cultural icons. Paschke used the celebrity figure, real or imagined, as a vehicle for explorations of personal and public identity with social and political implications. Although his style is representational, with a loose affiliation to Photorealism, Paschke’s art plays...
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  • Cacophonous PACE Gallery exhibition catalogue (hand signed by Robert Irwin)
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    Robert Irwin Cacophonous (hand signed by Robert Irwin), 2015 Softback exhibition catalogue with stiff wraps (hand signed by Robert Irwin) Hand signed by Robert Irwin on the title pag...
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  • Shards IVA (Axsom 151) exhibited at the Whitney with Museum & Richard Gray label
    By Frank Stella
    Located in New York, NY
    Frank Stella (Whitney Museum Exhibited) Shards IVA (Axsom 151), 1982 Lithograph & Silkscreen on Arches Cover Paper (Whitney Museum exhibition label verso of frame) 45 1/2 × 39 1/4 inches Edition 40/49 Signed on the front and numbered from the edition of 49. There were also 10 Artist's Proofs Frame included: held in original vintage frame with original labels Publisher: St. Petersburg Press, New York Special opportunity to acquire Whitney Museum exhibited and catalogued Frank Stella work - with original Whitney Museum label. (How cool is that?) Indeed, this is the very work that was featured at the monumental 1983 print retrospective at the Whitney Museum of 20th Century master artist-scholar Frank Stella. This work bears the original Whitney museum and Richard Gray...
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  • Alphabet Pour Adultes (Alphabet For Adults) Silkscreen, lithograph Signed Framed
    By Man Ray
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    Man Ray Alphabet Pour Adultes (Alphabet For Adults), 1970 Silkscreen in colors and lithograph on paper mounted on wood veneer mounted on card stock. Hand Signed. Numbered. Dated. Ha...
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  • Grey tinted Rainbow (Geometric Abstraction) dazzling Op Art framed assemblage
    By Richard Anuszkiewicz
    Located in New York, NY
    RICHARD ANUSZKIEWICZ Grey Tinted Rainbow, 1992 Assemblage with 14 Color Silkscreen and Lithograph Edition of 40 Pencil signed and numbered 11/40 on the front Frame included: elegantl...
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  • Rainbow Signed 1970s silkscreen & lithograph by pioneering female Fluxus artist
    By Mary Bauermeister
    Located in New York, NY
    Mary Bauermeister Rainbow, 1973 Lithograph and silkscreen on creamy white paper Hand signed, dated and numbered 56/250 by the artist on the front 19 x 25.5 inches Unframed This work is on the permanent collection of various institutions like: Rice University, Samuel Dorksy Museum of Art, Rutgers Zimmerli Museum and Wheaton College Massachusetts. While studying the fringe sciences the 1970s, Bauermeister created Rainbow (1973), a lithograph and silkscreen. She uses a creamy white background as the base. Two intersecting diagonal bands of color transcend across the page, and black cursive lettering dances over the surface serving as a mind map of interweaving ideas. Through the central band, Bauermeister shifts through the color spectrum; she begins with red and finishes with violet. Inspired by music, she uses strokes of color that are rhythmically smeared across the lithograph. The surface lettering, a kind of visual poetry, explores her interest in human emotion and science. The viewer can see Bauermeister’s thoughts as they flow into one another through the use of words such as bliss, love, and healing. Bauermeister also includes a repetition of words such as cancer, sickness, and cure. The word cancer emerges from a cell-like shape. A careful study of the words shows that they may seem dark in nature; however, she juxtaposes these words against the cheerful title and colors. Perhaps the rainbow symbolizes a new hope, an inspiration for an optimistic future. -Courtesy to the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art About Mary Bauermeister: A multidisciplinary artist known for her intricate and enigmatic assemblages, Mary Bauermeister (1934-2023) continues to defy categorization with layered works in a range of media. A precursory figure of the Fluxus movement—her studio was the meeting point for a number of defining artists of the avant-garde—her work plays an integral role in the discussion of art, both European and American, that emerged from the 1960s. Her reliefs and sculptures, which have incorporated drawing, text, found objects, natural materials and fabric, reference a plethora of concepts: from natural phenomena and astronomy to mathematics and language, as well as her own “spiritual-metaphysical experiences.” Maturing amidst the currents of Minimalism and Pop Art, Bauermeister’s art has resisted labels due to the singular expression of her interests and concerns, among them the simultaneous transience and permanence of the natural world with experimentations in transparency and magnification, multiplication and variation, structure and order, chance and ephemerality, introversion and extroversion. Her three-dimensional receptacles of thoughts, ideas, and notes contain visual, conceptual, and philosophical paradoxes that challenge perceptions and that offer literal and metaphorical windows into which one can glimpse the inner workings of the artist’s mind. - Courtesy of Michael Rosenfeld...
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