
Paula Castillo welded Brutalist sculpture
View Similar Items
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 5
Paula CastilloPaula Castillo welded Brutalist sculpture
$2,200List Price
About the Item
- Creator:Paula Castillo (1961, American)
- Dimensions:Height: 13 in (33.02 cm)Width: 14 in (35.56 cm)Depth: 13 in (33.02 cm)
- Medium:
- Period:
- Condition:excellent.
- Gallery Location:Surfside, FL
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU38210430002
About the Seller
4.9
Platinum Seller
Premium sellers with a 4.7+ rating and 24-hour response times
Established in 1995
1stDibs seller since 2014
1,797 sales on 1stDibs
Authenticity Guarantee
In the unlikely event there’s an issue with an item’s authenticity, contact us within 1 year for a full refund. DetailsMoney-Back Guarantee
If your item is not as described, is damaged in transit, or does not arrive, contact us within 7 days for a full refund. Details24-Hour Cancellation
You have a 24-hour grace period in which to reconsider your purchase, with no questions asked.Vetted Professional Sellers
Our world-class sellers must adhere to strict standards for service and quality, maintaining the integrity of our listings.Price-Match Guarantee
If you find that a seller listed the same item for a lower price elsewhere, we’ll match it.Trusted Global Delivery
Our best-in-class carrier network provides specialized shipping options worldwide, including custom delivery.More From This Seller
View AllItalian Silvana Cenci Signed Mid Century Modern Steel Gold Explosion Sculpture
By Silvana Cenci
Located in Surfside, FL
Silvana Cenci, internationally renowned explosive sculptor, died October 1, 2000 at her home in Gray.
Ms. Cenci, who was born in Florence, Italy, before World War II, married Stuart Church and moved to the U.S. permanently in 1959. She lived in Boston for many years, where she was a founder of the Brookline Art Center and a founding member of Summerthing. She exhibited widely throughout Europe and the U.S., and her work is in many museums and public and private collections.
After moving to the States, Ms. Cenci began working with new technologies from the aircraft industry, and with explosives. She moved to Northwood, NH, in the early 60s, and pursued and perfected her revolutionary experimentation with explosive sculpture in stainless steel. A native of Italy, she lived most of her life in America where she became internationally known, primarily for using dynamite to blast images into stainless steel and finishing some pieces with pure gold. The pieces created with dynamite were often utilized by architects. One piece titled “Wheels in Motion” hung in Boston’s South Station.
Education and Training
Accademia di Belle Arti, Florence, Italy
Academie de la Grande Chaumiere, Paris
Lewis and Clark College, Portland, Oregon
Selected Individual Exhibitions
Galleria Numero, Florence, Italy
Galleria San Carlo, Naples, Italy
Galleria d'Arte Totti, Milan, Italy
Galeria Beno, Zurich, Switzerland
Nova Gallery, Boston
Weeden Gallery, Boston
Capricorn Gallery, New York City
Roach-Hoffman Gallery, Naples, Florida
Bristol Art Museum, Bristol, Rhode Island, retrospective
Frank Tanzer Gallery, Boston
Symphony Hall, Boston
Musica Viva, Cambridge, Massachusetts
Los Llanos Gallery, Santa Fe, New Mexico
Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff
Selected Group Exhibitions
"Oregon Artists," Lincoln County Art Center, Lincoln, Oregon
"Exhibition of Painting and Sculpture," Henry Art Gallery, Seattle, Washington
"West Coast Sculptors," Portland Art Museum, Portland, Oregon
"Mostra Nazionale del Bianco e Nero," Museo Civico Castello Urasino, Catania, Italy
"New England Art Today," Northwestern University, Boston
"New England Sculptors Association," Boston City Hall, Boston
"Silvana Cenci and Calvin Libby," Bristol Art Museum, Bristol, Rhode Island
"Adele Seronde and Silvana Cenci," Weeden Gallery, Boston
"Contemporary Italian Art-Italian Heritage," Boston City Hall, Boston, catalog
"Explosion of Form, Color, Imagination: Works by Silvana Cenci
Selected Awards
First Honorable Mention, "Design in Transit," Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority Competition, Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, Massachusetts
Research in Creative Art Grant, Blanche E. Colman Foundation, Boston, Massachusetts
Statue of Victory, World Culture Prize for Letters, Arts and Sciences, Centro Studi e Ricerche delle Nazioni, Salsomaggiore Terme, Italy
Harvard-pedigreed architect Harlow Carpenter built the Bundy in 1962. The venue's first decade was lively with exhibitions that featured a large cast of artists, including Dino Basaldella, Judith Brown, Silvana Cenci, Xavier Corbero...
Category
Mid-20th Century Modern Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Gold, Steel
Paula Castillo welded Brutalist sculpture
By Paula Castillo
Located in Surfside, FL
while composed of industrial steel this has a delicate almost floral quality to it and is suitable for the outdoors and would work beautifully in a garden. it also filters light thro...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Steel
Modernist Sculpture Figural Portrait Bust Brutalist Wire Work
By Irving George Lehman
Located in Surfside, FL
This piece is unsigned. Irving Lehman (1900-1983) was an American Jewish painter, sculptor, engraver, and designer. Born in Kiev in then Russia, Lehman studied at the Art Students League, Cooper Union and the National Academy of Art and spent much of his working life in New York City. Part of the Abstract Expressionist school, he worked in oil and watercolor as a painter and in metal and steel as a sculptor; his works have been shown in galleries in England, France, Italy, Israel and Japan, and were included in an international traveling exhibition in Europe in 1951. Like many other artists of his generation, he painted for the WPA and then adopted a more abstract style after WWII.
Lehman spent much of his career in NYC. He had his first exhibition at ACA Gallery in 1934. He also exhibited at the Whitney, National Academy, PAFA, Brooklyn Museum, Chicago Art Institute, and others.
This work contains Constructivist elements anticipating the more gestural abstraction of the post-WWII New York Abstract Expressionist School.
Member of American Art Congress, worked near Woodstock and in Columbia County...
Category
Mid-20th Century Modern Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Steel
Large Mario Almaguer Cuban Art Welded Painted Steel Abstract Sculpture Modernism
Located in Surfside, FL
Mario Almaguer (b. Marianao, Cuba, 1955) He moved to the U.S. in 1994 to Miami where since has been living and working. Essentially self-taught, he embraced sculpture as his mean for expression. Without any kind of formal academic education or training in the arts, perseverance and praxis made him an artist. His work has been influenced by cuban master Agustin Cardenas and british Henry Moore. In his early years until 1994 he produced a large amount of small and medium scale wooden sculptures. From 1994 to the present, Almaguer creates and produces steel sculptures. It's with his works on steel where he encounters a strong expression with a striking liberty hard to deliver in wood. His monumental sculptures were recently exhibited at Miami Dade...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Steel
STEEL ROOM California Minimalist Abstract Sculpture
By Peter Lodato
Located in Surfside, FL
STEEL ROOM, 1989, steel sculpture, 8 x 8 x 8”, signed and dated.
Peter Lodato was born in 1946 in Los Angeles, California, has exhibited extensively and received significant acclai...
Category
1980s Minimalist Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Steel
Untitled, Steel, Iron Bella Feldman Brutalist Sculpture
By Bella Feldman
Located in Surfside, FL
Bella Feldman (American, b. 1930), Untitled, metal 2-wheeled cart with metal cables, (Provenance: Allan Stone Gallery, New York, NY) gallery label affixed affixed verso, overall: 37"h x 48"l x 37"w. Provenance: Private Collection
Bella Feldman is an American sculptor whose work addresses the themes of sexuality, war, and the persistent anxiety of the industrial age. Feldman is known for pioneering the use of glass with steel. Her work has affinities with Surrealism, Post-Minimalism, and the Feminist art movement, although she has no formal affiliation with these. A Professor Emeritus at the California College of the Arts, Feldman lives and works in Oakland, CA and London, England.
Bella Feldman was born in 1930 in New York City to a family of working-class Jewish immigrants from Poland. She grew up in the Bronx tenements. Feldman attended The High School of Music & Art in Manhattan during World War II. Students were required to visit museums and galleries as part of the curriculum. When Feldman was thirteen, she visited her first art museum, the Museum of Modern Art. There, she saw Meret Oppenheim’s Object (1936), the fur-lined cup and saucer, and was struck by her strong psychological response to this work. Other early influences included Alberto Giacometti’s The Palace at 4 a.m. (1932) and the sculpture of David Smith. One of Feldman’s earliest sculptures Warrior (1952) pays tribute to Giacometti.
During the Holocaust, Feldman lost numerous family members who remained in Poland, an experience that helped shape her worldview. This includes her life-long preoccupation with war, and the overwhelming effects of the military-industrial complex.
Feldman received a BA from Queens College, City University of New York. She married Leonard Feldman at age 18, and moved to California with him in 1951 where they both accepted teaching positions. Feldman has two children, Nina Feldman, born 1954 and Ethan Feldman, born 1956.
In 1965, Feldman started teaching at the California College of the Arts. In 1971 she and her family moved to Uganda, East Africa on a grant from the E. L. Cabot Trust Fund at Harvard University. Feldman spent two years teaching art in Uganda prior to the genocidal war in that country. Upon her return to CCA, she faced gender discrimination and a threat to her job. Her successful fight to retain her position prompted her to later become an advocate for other women faculty, who she helped to achieve equity and job security. Feldman was awarded an MA in 1973 from San Jose State University. Her teachers were Sam Richardson...
Category
20th Century Contemporary Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Steel, Iron
You May Also Like
NASA Chair (Space Program: Rare Earths), Contemporary Art, Signed and Titled
By Tom Sachs
Located in Hamburg, DE
Tom Sachs (US American, b. 1966)
NASA Chair (Space Program: Rare Earths), 2020
Medium: Screenprint and felt-tip pen on Samsonite folding chair
...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Steel
"Off Minor", Richard Heinrich, Abstract Contemporary Steel Sculpture, Metal
By Richard Heinrich
Located in New York, NY
"Off Minor" by Richard Heinrich, 1999
Steel
Contemporary Abstract Sculpture, Industrial, Modern, Indoor, Outdoor
Category
2010s Abstract Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Steel
"Equinox", Richard Heinrich, Abstract Contemporary Steel Sculpture, Metal
By Richard Heinrich
Located in New York, NY
"Equinox" by Richard Heinrich, 2011
Steel
Contemporary Abstract Sculpture, Industrial, Modern, Indoor, Outdoor
Category
2010s Abstract Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Steel
"Fractal", Richard Heinrich, Abstract Contemporary Steel Sculpture, Metal
By Richard Heinrich
Located in New York, NY
"Fractal" by Richard Heinrich, 2011
Steel
Contemporary Abstract Sculpture, Industrial, Modern, Indoor, Outdoor
Category
2010s Abstract Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Steel
"Duet", Abstract, Figurative, Welded Steel Metal Sculpture
By Isobel Folb Sokolow
Located in New York, NY
"Duet" by Isobel Folb Sokolow
Welded found metal steel and gold leaf
Sokolow creates both abstract and figurative metal sculpture for indoor display.
Abstract, Dancing, Dancers, Pe...
Category
1990s Abstract Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Metal, Steel, Gold Leaf
"Bop for Sid", Richard Heinrich, Abstract Contemporary Steel Sculpture, Metal
By Richard Heinrich
Located in New York, NY
"Bop for Sid" by Richard Heinrich, 2011
Steel
Contemporary Abstract Sculpture, Industrial, Modern, Indoor, Outdoor
Category
2010s Abstract Abstract Sculptures
Materials
Steel