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Frame Included
Pears from Fruits and Flowers III
Located in New York, NY
Screen print in colors on Arches paper, Signed in Pencil, Edition of 125
Donald Sultan is best known for his still life imagery, deconstructing and transforming organic elements suc...
Category
1990s Minimalist Still-life Prints
Materials
Screen
Souvenir I
By Jasper Johns
Located in Missouri, MO
Jasper Johns (American, b. 1930)
Souvenir I, 1972
Lithograph in Colors on Angoumois a la Main Paper
Hand-signed Lower Right
Numbered 20/63 and Stamped Lower Left
38.5 x 29.5 inches
3...
Category
1970s Minimalist Abstract Prints
Materials
Paper, Lithograph
M (ULAE 113)
By Jasper Johns
Located in Missouri, MO
M (ULAE 113), 1972
Jasper Johns (American, b. 1930)
Lithograph in Colors on Angoumois a la Main Paper
Hand Signed and Dated Lower Right
Numbered 56/67 Lower Left
38.5 x 29 inches
39....
Category
1970s Minimalist Abstract Prints
Materials
Paper, Lithograph
Cake Shop, woodblock print by Clifton Karhu, red, yellow, black, framed, Japan
Located in Santa Fe, NM
Cake Shop, woodblock print by Clifton Karhu, red, yellow, black, framed, Japan
hand signed and numbered
Category
1990s Contemporary Landscape Prints
Materials
Paper
Koshihata Snow, woodblock print by Clifton Karhu, white, Japan, framed, signed
Located in Santa Fe, NM
Koshihata Snow, woodblock print by Clifton Karhu, white, Japan, framed, signed 1975
hand signed and numbered
Category
1970s Contemporary Landscape Prints
Materials
Paper
Shoji, woodblock print by Clifton Karhu, round, framed, brown, white, yellow
Located in Santa Fe, NM
Shoji, woodblock print by Clifton Karhu, round, framed, brown, white, yellow
framed woodblock print
hand signed and numbered by the artist
Category
1990s Contemporary Landscape Prints
Materials
Paper
Apple and Lemon
Located in Palo Alto, CA
Roy Lichtenstein Apple and Lemon, 1983 is an excellent example of the artist’s later work. Lichtenstein largely abandoned his famous comic strip pan...
Category
1980s Pop Art Still-life Prints
Materials
Handmade Paper, Woodcut
Variation I (B)
By El Anatsui
Located in Saint Louis, MO
El Anatsui
Variation I (B), 2014
Pigment print with hand collage and copper wire
23 x 30.2 inches (58.4 x 76.8 cm)
Edition of 16
Category
2010s Abstract Abstract Prints
Materials
Wire
Brown Cottonwood
Located in Missouri, MO
Brown Cottonwood, 2005
By Andrew Millner (American, b. 1967)
Lightjet Print Mounted on UV Plex
Signed Lower Right
Unframed: 87" x 44"
Framed: 88" x 45"
Andrew Millner is a visual artist based in St. Louis, MO. His work investigates the relationship between art and nature, the natural and the made. Millner received a BFA from University of Michigan, in Painting and Sculpture.
He has had more than 56 group exhibitions since 1987 and over 15 solo exhibitions at institutions including Miller Yezerski Gallery, Boston, Massachusetts; Ellen Miller Gallery, Boston, Massachusetts; CCA, Santa Fe, New Mexico; Tria Gallery, New York City, New York; Richard Levy Gallery, Albuquerque, New Mexico; David Floria Gallery, Aspen, Colorado; Contemporary Museum St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri.
"I started drawing on the computer in 2005. Previous to that, most of my work had been about finding lines in nature; the contours of leaves, the ripples on rivers, the edges of overlapping hills. Although I was using traditional art materials, I prepared the canvases with slicker and slicker surfaces so that the lines wouldn’t soak into the background but sit on top, preserving the nuances of my hand. I thought of the drawings as photographic, in the diaristic sense of recording moments of time. I enjoyed the easy correspondence of the endless novelty of line in these natural forms and the endless variety of line created by my hand. I couldn’t draw the same leaf twice so my subject and process were well matched.
I had the idea to draw every leaf of a tree, but I struggled with the scale and complexity of the subject. How does one bring a tree indoors? How can one see the whole tree and its individual parts simultaneously? I tried traditional strategies and materials but the results were unsatisfactory. I wondered if it would be possible to make the drawing on a computer. Since everything… music, photos, movies & books were being digitized, what about drawing? I wasn’t interested in something computer-generated, but sought to “dumb down” the computer and use it as a repository for simple line drawings. In the program I use, Adobe Illustrator, lines are called “paths”… an apt name since the line exists at no set scale or color. Only later do I assign the attributes of color and thickness.
Taking my laptop outdoors, I drew my first tree “en plein air.” Using a digital tablet and pen, I drew simple contours of the leaves and branches. Having these drawings remain in digital form rather than in physical form, opened up interesting possibilities and enabled me to tackle the complexity of a tree in intriguing ways. My lines were free and separate from the background and from each other. I drew the branches individually and then later, I could cobble them together to reconstitute the whole tree. On the screen, I could zoom in and out and draw at different scales simultaneously. I could zoom out to draw a simple contour of the entire trunk and then zoom in to draw the smallest leaf with equal effort. I drew in layers so that as the drawings accumulated I could turn layers “off” so that they wouldn’t obscure subsequent layers. These two novelties, drawing at different scales simultaneously and making parts of the drawing invisible to allow for work on top or behind previous drawings, allowed for the accumulation of hundreds of simple outlines to create a dizzying visual complexity.
Subsequent trees I drew from photographs. I would take hundreds of close-ups of a tree from a single point of view and then stitch all of these close ups together on the computer. Sometimes I photographed the same tree in the summer and then in the fall after it lost its leaves. This allowed me to see and draw all of the branches and limbs unadorned and unobscured. I would draw the tree twice, with and without leaves, merging the two drawings into one document. In this way, the drawings comprise and compress great spans of looking over vast time frames and seemingly contradictory close-up and distant points of view.
My digital drawings have been outputted in different ways… mostly as photographs printed directly from the digital file or as archival inkjet prints. The results defy easy categorization. Are they drawings, prints, or camera-less photographs...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Still-life Prints
Materials
Plexiglass, Inkjet
Dark Gumball Machine
Located in New York, NY
Wayne Thiebaud
Dark Gumball Machine, 1964/ 2017
Hard ground and soft ground etching
18h x 12w in
Category
1660s Post-War Still-life Prints
Materials
Etching