Board Still-life Prints
to
6
6
1
1
Overall Width
to
Overall Height
to
8
5
1
6
1
1
1
7
1
6
2
6
3
2
2
2
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
1
10,980
454
233
233
192
8
Style: Contemporary
Medium: Board
Listen # 6, Conservation Art, Animal Art, Street Art Banksy Style Art
By Harry Bunce
Located in Deddington, GB
Listen # 6 by Harry Bunce [2021]
Please note that insitu images are purely an indication of how a piece may look
Listen # 6 by Harry Bunce is a mixed media work of Bunce’s rabbit ch...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Mixed Media, Board
Still life with chairs and birds - XXI Century, Figurative Monotype Print
Located in Warsaw, PL
Siergiej Timochow, a Belorussian artist, born in 1960.
He studied at an art school in Minsk in 1979 before continuing to study at the Fine Arts Academy in Belarus.
His acrylic and ...
Category
Early 2000s Contemporary Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Cardboard, Color
Still life with a chair - XXI Century, Figurative Monotype Print, Bird, Apple
Located in Warsaw, PL
Siergiej Timochow, a Belorussian artist, born in 1960.
He studied at an art school in Minsk in 1979 before continuing to study at the Fine Arts Academy in Belarus.
His acrylic and ...
Category
Early 2000s Contemporary Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Cardboard, Monotype
Still life with bottles - XXI Century, Contemporary Monotype Print, Dark colors
Located in Warsaw, PL
Siergiej Timochow, a Belorussian artist, born in 1960.
He studied at an art school in Minsk in 1979 before continuing to study at the Fine Arts Academy in Belarus.
His acrylic and ...
Category
Early 2000s Contemporary Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Cardboard, Monotype
A window - XXI Century, Contemporary Abstract Monotype Print, Monochromatic
Located in Warsaw, PL
Siergiej Timochow, a Belorussian artist, born in 1960.
He studied at an art school in Minsk in 1979 before continuing to study at the Fine Arts Academy in Belarus.
His acrylic and ...
Category
Early 2000s Contemporary Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Cardboard, Monotype
Still life with two chairs - XXI Century, Figurative Monotype Print, Birds
Located in Warsaw, PL
Siergiej Timochow, a Belorussian artist, born in 1960.
He studied at an art school in Minsk in 1979 before continuing to study at the Fine Arts Academy in Belarus.
His acrylic and ...
Category
Early 2000s Contemporary Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Monotype, Cardboard
Yellow apples - XXI Century, Contemporary Still life Monotype Print, Figurative
Located in Warsaw, PL
Siergiej Timochow, a Belorussian artist, born in 1960.
He studied at an art school in Minsk in 1979 before continuing to study at the Fine Arts Academy in Belarus.
His acrylic and ...
Category
Early 2000s Contemporary Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Cardboard, Monotype
A Lemon, Two Lemons - Original Etching on Cardboard by Leo Guida - 1980s
By Leo Guida
Located in Roma, IT
A Lemon, Two Lemons is an original Contemporary artwork realized in the 1980s by the italian artist Leo Guida.
Original Etching on cardboard.
Numbered titled and hand-signed in pen...
Category
1980s Contemporary Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Etching, Cardboard
Related Items
"CONGREGATION OF WITS: BOX SET", 41 silkscreen prints, double-sided, custom box
Located in Toronto, Ontario
"CONGREGATION OF WITS, Box Set of 41 Prints", 2018, limited-edition collection of 40 double-sided silkscreen prints, plus one title print, by Andrew Cornell Robinson. There are 10 box sets in custom-made chocolate linen archival boxes with a gold stamped title. Each print is signed, stamped and editioned. The prints measure 17x17", the box 17.5x17.5".
Note the double-sided printing – surfaces of text, surfaces of image. The installation (see photos above) is a striking performance in itself with myriad possibilities for color, pattern, language, culture, politics, identity. The artist is pleased to offer guidance on the installation, according to the collector's wishes. Or a collector may arrange personally. It's a dynamic body of work that delights in the craft of making and the experience of revealing a tapestry of image and language.
Initially inspired by a visit to the Talking Sculptures...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Paper, Archival Paper, Color, Screen, Linen
Salvador Dali - Cherries - Original Hand-Signed Lithograph
Located in Collonge Bellerive, Geneve, CH
Salvador Dali - Cherries - Original Hand-Signed Lithograph
Dimensions: P. 57 x 37 cm
Sheet: 75 x 56 cm
Handsigned
Edition: EC.d (collaborator edition "d")
Excellent Condition
Refer...
Category
1960s Surrealist Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Lithograph
$6,131
H 29.53 in W 22.05 in D 0.4 in
June Breeze (hand-printed botanical cyanotype, 18 x 36 inches)
Located in Oakland, CA
This long narrow monotype was made by carefully arranging hundreds of individual blades of fresh-cut native Californian wild grass. The species of tall marsh grass is called Gray Rus...
Category
2010s Contemporary Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Paper, Archival Paper, Rag Paper, Monotype, Photogram
$480 Sale Price
20% Off
H 18 in W 36 in
Untitled 90-13
By Dale Chihuly
Located in Lyons, CO
Color monotype.
Category
1990s Contemporary Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Monotype
The Celestial Hippocampus (Ed. 88/140)
Located in Dallas, TX
"The Scar by China Miéville is a novel which has been a part of my life for many years, and has travelled as my companion through since adolescence. I've attempted to depict the Avan...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Surrealist Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Screen
Marini Horse with Jugglers 1965- Vintage
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Printed in 1965 by Franz Hanfstaengl in Munich, Germany. The Marini bears the printer's blind stamp just below the bottom left-hand corner of the image, which reads "Hansfstaengldru...
Category
1960s Contemporary Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Offset
Tim Southall, Bear Hugs (Cerulean), Limited Edition Animal Print, Affordable Art
By Tim Southall
Located in Deddington, GB
Bear Hugs (Cerulean) By Tim Southall [2021]
Limited Edition
Silkscreen Print
Edition of 100
Image size: H:68 cm x W:48 cm
Complete Size of Unframed Work: H:76 cm x W:56 cm x D:0.01cm...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Screen
$589
H 29.93 in W 22.05 in D 0.01 in
Blue Vase on Hand Made Paper, Gorgeous Pochoir and Relief Signed Ed of 3, Framed
By Ed Baynard
Located in New York, NY
Ed Baynard
Blue Vase on Antique Paper, 2002
Pochoir and relief in colors on vintage handmade paper
Signed, dated and numbered lower right ‘AP 3/4 Ed Baynard 02’. This work is artist'...
Category
Early 2000s Contemporary Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Color, Stencil, Lithograph
$2,995
H 26 in W 22 in D 1.5 in
Lobster, Pop Art Screenprint by Hunt Slonem
By Hunt Slonem
Located in Long Island City, NY
Artist: Hunt Slonem
Title: Lobster
Year: 1980
Medium: Screenprint, signed and numbered in pencil
Edition: 250; AP 30
Image: 19 x 19 inches
Paper Size: 22 x 30 inches
Category
1980s Contemporary Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Screen
Guy Allen, Labrador and Bumblebee, Affordable Etching, Dog Art
By Guy Allen
Located in Deddington, GB
Guy Allen
Labrador and Bumblebee
Original Etching and Gold Leaf on Paper
Image size: 20cm x 30cm
Edition size: 75
Please note the price is for the unframed original etching.
Please n...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Etching
Frogs and Toad, Signed lithograph (AP), from Conspiracy: The Artist as Witness
By Jack Beal
Located in New York, NY
Jack Beal
Frogs and Toad, 1971
Hand signed in pencil by Jack Beal, annotated AP
One-color lithograph proofed by hand and pulled by machine from a zinc plate on Arches buff paper with deckled edges at the Shorewood Bank Street Atelier
Stamped, hand numbered AP, aside from the regular edition of 150 Stamped on reverse: COPYRIGHT © 1971 BY JACK BEAL, bears blind stamp
18 × 24 inches
Unframed
18 x 24 inches
Stamped on reverse: COPYRIGHT © 1971 BY JACK BEAL, bears distinctive blind stamp of publisher (shown) Publisher: David Godine, Center for Constitutional Rights, Washington, D.C.
Jack Beal's "Frogs and Toads" is a classic example of protest art from the early 1970s - the most influential era until today. This historic graphic was created for the legendary portfolio "CONSPIRACY: the Artist as Witness", to raise money for the legal defense of the Chicago 8 - a group of anti-Vietnam War activists indicted by President Nixon's Attorney General John Mitchell for conspiring to riot during the 1968 Democratic National Convention. (1968 was also the year Bobby Kennedy was killed and American casualties in Vietnam exceeded 30,000.) The eight demonstrators included Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, David Dellinger, Tom Hayden, Rennie Davis, John Froines, Lee Weiner, and Bobby Seale. (The eighth activist, Bobby Seale, was severed from the case and sentenced to four years for contempt after being handcuffed, shackled to a chair and gagged.) Although Abbie Hoffman would later joke that these radicals couldn't even agree on lunch, the jury convicted them of conspiracy, with one juror proclaiming the demonstrators "should have been shot down by the police." All of the convictions were ultimately overturned by the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals.
This lithograph has fine provenance: it comes directly from the original Portfolio: "Conspiracy The Artist as Witness" which also featured works by Alexander Calder, Nancy Spero and Leon Golub, Romare Bearden Sol Lewitt, Robert Morris, Claes Oldenburg, Larry Poons, Peter Saul, Raphael Soyer and Frank Stella - as well as this one by Jack Beal. It was originally housed in an elegant cloth case, accompanied by a colophon page. This is the first time since 1971 that this important work has been removed from the original portfolio case for sale. It is becoming increasingly scarce because so many from this edition are in the permanent collections of major museums and institutions worldwide.
Jack Beal wrote a special message about this work on the Portfolio's colophon page. It says, "In 1956, shortly after Sondra and I moved to New York, two friends were arrested and jailed for protesting air-raid drills. From them and their friends came our education. This work is dedicated to them and their families. "In Memory of Patricia McClure Daw and AL Uhrie" - This print was made for their children.
Jack Beal Biography:
Early in his career Walter Henry “Jack” Beal Jr. painted abstract expressionist canvases, because he believed it was “the only valid way to paint.” By the early 1960s he totally altered his approach and fully repudiated abstraction. Turning to representation, he painted narrative and figurative subjects, often enhanced by bright colors and dramatic perspectives.
Beal was born in Richmond, Virginia, and from 1950 to 1953 he attended the Norfolk Division of William and Mary College Polytechnic Institute, (now Old Dominion University) where he studied biology and anatomy. Shifting gears, he sought art training at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago where he focused on drawing, and met his wife, artist Sondra Freckelton. His art history instructor encouraged her students to paint in the manner of established artists, and to that end he frequented the Institute’s galleries. For Beal this was significant: “Until I saw pictures of real quality I had tended to think of painting as just so much self-indulgent smearing around, but when I saw masterpieces by Cézanne and Matisse, and other painters of similar stature, I was bowled over; suddenly I realized the force of art.”
After spending three years (1953–1956) at the Art Institute, Beal concluded his studies there without getting a terminal degree, thinking it was only useful if he wanted to teach, which, at the time, he did not. He also took courses at the University of Chicago in 1955 and 1956. During this period he married Freckelton, a fellow student and sculptor who began her career working in wood and plastic. Together they moved to New York’s SoHo District before its transformation from a wasteland of sweatshops and small factories into an arts district. They were active with the Artist Tenants Association which was instrumental in getting zoning laws changed so that artists could live and work in the well-lit lofts.
Embracing what came to be called “New Realism,” Beal initially painted an occasional landscape as well as earthy-toned still lifes which consisted of jumbled collections filled with personal objects. His signature style started with a series of female nudes—all modeled by Freckelton—based on Greek mythology. These were large canvases with flat paint surfaces, dramatic foreshortening, and unusual perspectives. He further enlivened them with vivid colors, stark lighting, and dynamic patterns derived from textiles and overstuffed furniture. He stopped painting nudes after two episodes. The first came as he was loading a canvas of his naked wife onto a truck in lower Manhattan; several laborers walked by and started to fondle and kiss the painting. On the one hand he felt his wife had been violated, while on the other he was pleased that his realism was so convincing. The second occurred after a solo exhibition in Chicago at which the reception had been sponsored by Playboy magazine. A few days later he was approached by a publicist and asked if Playboy bunnies could be photographed in front of his paintings. He refused.
Some portrait commissions came Beal’s way, but he preferred only portraying friends. More significant were four large murals on the History of Labor in America, the 20th Century: Technology (1975), which he undertook for the headquarters of the United States Department of Labor in Washington. Following a historical timeline, the themes were: colonization, settlement, nineteenth century industry, and twentieth century technology. The unveiling ceremony was attended by government officials and Joan Mondale, an arts advocate and wife of the vice-president. The reviewer for the Washington Post wrote enthusiastically: “They’re heartfelt and they’re big (each is 12 feet square). Their many costumed actors (the Indian, the trapper, the scientist, the hardhat, the capitalist in striped pants, the union maid, etc.) strike dramatic poses in dramatic settings (a seaside wood at dawn, an outdoor blacksmith’s forge, a 19th-century mill, a 20th-century lab). The lighting is theatrical. Beal’s compositions, with their swooping curves and bunched diagonals, are as complicated as his interwoven plots.” To accomplish the murals Beal assembled a team of assistants and models, much in the manner of Renaissance masters, which included artist friends and Freckelton. who by then was painting brightly colorful still lifes.
A second mural commission ensued from New York City’s Metropolitan Transit Authority for two twenty-foot long installations for the Times Square Interborough Rapid Transit Company subway station. Beal’s designs for The Return of Spring (installed in 2001, three days after the terrorist attacks in New York, Washington, DC and Philadelphia) and The Onset of Winter (installed in 2005), Beal captured the appearance of his models in an oil painting made to the scale of the intended mosaic. A collaboration with Miotto Mosaics, the canvases were shipped to the Travisanutto Workshop, in Spilimbergo, Italy, where craftsmen fabricated the design to glass mosaics. The Return of Spring depicted construction workers and other New Yorkers in front of a subway kiosk and an outdoor produce market and in The Onset of Winter, a crowd watches a film crew recording a woman entering the subway as snow falls against the city’s skyline. Harkening back to some of his early nudes based on Greek myth, Persephone, goddess of fertility and wife of Hades, appears in both. The symbolism is pertinent, since she spent six months each year below ground.
Although he disparaged teaching early on, Beal and Freckelton offered four summertime workshops on their farm in Oneonta, New York. He was an instructor at the New York Academy of Art, a graduate art school he helped to establish in 1982. Returning to Virginia, he taught at Hollins College...
Category
1970s Realist Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Lithograph
Jean Cocteau - Artaban - Original Lithograph
By Jean Cocteau
Located in Collonge Bellerive, Geneve, CH
Original Lithograph by Jean Cocteau
Title: Artaban
1961
signed in the stone/printed signature
Dimensions: 38 x 28 cm
Lithograph made for the portfolio "Gitans et Corridas" ...
Category
1960s Modern Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Lithograph
Previously Available Items
Colorburst Pinwheels, Pinned Paper Flowers in Green, Pink, Yellow, Purple
By Jill Parisi
Located in Kent, CT
In this framed wall sculpture, digital prints and hand-colored lithography on hand-cut tissue weight kozo and gampi paper are cut to mimic botanical shapes and pinned with entomology...
Category
2010s Contemporary Board Still-life Prints
Materials
Foam Board, Tissue Paper, Pins, Digital, Lithograph
H 16 in W 41 in D 2.25 in
Board still-life prints for sale on 1stDibs.
Find a wide variety of authentic Board still-life prints available on 1stDibs. While artists have worked in this medium across a range of time periods, art made with this material during the 21st Century is especially popular. If you’re looking to add still-life prints created with this material to introduce a provocative pop of color and texture to an otherwise neutral space in your home, the works available on 1stDibs include elements of orange and other colors. There are many well-known artists whose body of work includes ceramic sculptures. Popular artists on 1stDibs associated with pieces like this include Siergiej Timochow, Audrey Flack, Andy Warhol, and Leo Guida. Frequently made by artists working in the Contemporary, Pop Art, all of these pieces for sale are unique and many will draw the attention of guests in your home. Not every interior allows for large Board still-life prints, so small editions measuring 0.1 inches across are also available
Recently Viewed
View AllMore Ways To Browse
Maurice Martin
Mauricio Battifora
Melvin Charles Warren
Men In Suits Painting
Men Playing Chess
Mexican Boat Paintings
Michael Bergt
Michael Clement
Michael Daly
Michael Easton
Michael Eisemann
Michiel Schrijver
Mick Jagger Poster Vintage
Midcentury Beach Umbrella
Midwest Landscape Painting
Miguel Dominguez
Miles Davis Poster
Misty Loch








