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UnknownOrchid and Bamboo (Sensu-e)c. 1920-1950
c. 1920-1950
$600
£458.08
€524.67
CA$840.60
A$939.89
CHF 493.01
MX$11,384.33
NOK 6,223.31
SEK 5,879.52
DKK 3,916.11
About the Item
Japanese (mid 20th Century)
Unsigned wood cut with hand embellishments in gouache created for a Japanese folding fan.
Unsigned
Image size: 8 3/8 x 18 1/8 inches
Mounted on support sheet from an album
Condition: very fresh colors
- Creation Year:c. 1920-1950
- Dimensions:Height: 8.38 in (21.29 cm)Width: 18.13 in (46.06 cm)
- Medium:
- Period:
- Condition:Very good with fresh colors.
- Gallery Location:Fairlawn, OH
- Reference Number:Seller: UK23031stDibs: LU14015085232
About the Seller
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Associations
International Fine Print Dealers Association
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- Return Policy
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Joseph B. O’Sickey, Painter
1974 CLEVELAND ARTS PRIZE FOR VISUAL ARTS
The title conferred on him by Plain Dealer art critic Steve Litt in a 1994 article, “the dean of painting in northeast Ohio,” must have pleased Joseph O'Sickey. It was more than 30 years since he had burst onto the local (and national) art scene. O’Sickey was already in his 40s in that spring of 1962 when he had his first one-man show at the Akron Art Museum and was signed by New York’s prestigious Seligmann Galleries, founded in 1888. In the decade and a half that followed, he would have seven one-man shows at Seligmann, which had showed the work of such trailblazing figures as Seurat, Vuilliard, Bonnard, Leger and Picasso, and appear in all of the group shows.
O’Sickey took the Best Painting award in the 1962 May Show at the Cleveland Museum of Art (CMA). He and would capture the same honor in back-to-back May Shows in 1964 and ’65, and again in 1967. The remarkable thing, noted the Plain Dealer’s Helen Borsick, was that he accomplished this sweep in a variety of painterly styles, even using that most hackneyed of subjects, flowers. “The subject doesn’t matter,” he told her, “what the artist brings to it is the important thing.” O’Sickey’s garden and landscape paintings were big and bold, eschewing delicate detail in favor of vitality and impact. The great art collector and CMA benefactor Katherine C. White, standing before one of O’Sickey’s vivid garden paintings, compared the sensation to “being pelted with flowers.”
Though he might represent an entire blossom with one or two smudged brush strokes or a stem with a simple sweep of green, O’Sickey rejected the moniker of Impressionist—or Pointillist or Abstract painter or Expressionist. “My work,” he said, “is a direct response to the subject. I believe in fervor and poetic metaphor. I try to make each color and shape visible and identifiable within the context of surrounding colors and shapes. A yellow must hold its unique quality from any another yellow or surrounding color, and yet read as a lemon or an object, by inference. It does not require shading or modeling—the poetic evocation is part of the whole.”
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