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Style: Suprematist
Suprematist Figure - Early 20th Century Russian East European Portrait Painting
Suprematist Figure - Early 20th Century Russian East European Portrait Painting

Suprematist Figure - Early 20th Century Russian East European Portrait Painting

Located in Sevenoaks, GB

A beautiful and very interesting early 20th century Eastern European suprematist style oil on board depicting a figure wearing a red hat holding a cane. The work is signed with init...

Category

Early 20th Century Suprematist Art

Materials

Oil, Board

'Portrait of a Lady' by Max Lewis (Hamburg 1863 – 1930 Vienna)
'Portrait of a Lady' by Max Lewis (Hamburg 1863 – 1930 Vienna)

'Portrait of a Lady' by Max Lewis (Hamburg 1863 – 1930 Vienna)

Located in Knokke, BE

Max Lewis Hamburg 1863 – 1930 Vienna German painter 'Portrait of a Lady' Signature: 
signed revers ‘M. Lewis’, certified by Louise Lewis, sister Medium: oil on panel Dimensions: im...

Category

Early 20th Century Suprematist Art

Materials

Oil, Panel

untitled
untitled

untitled

Located in New York, US

Nikolai Suetin (Russian: Николай Суетин; 25 October 1897 – 22 January 1954) was a Russian Suprematist artist. He worked as a graphic artist, a designer, and a ceramics painter. Suet...

Category

1920s Suprematist Art

Materials

Paper, Ink, Watercolor, Pencil

Beach dunes with hundreds of layers of colors, white with folds unique texture
Beach dunes with hundreds of layers of colors, white with folds unique texture

Beach dunes with hundreds of layers of colors, white with folds unique texture

By Ruth Vidal

Located in Carballo, ES

This year, 2024, the artist Ruth Vidal (1998, Isla de Arousa) launches her latest research into painting and games. These works are based on the references that the artist draws from...

Category

21st Century and Contemporary Suprematist Art

Materials

Canvas, Cotton, Polymer

ATO>MIC #13, Unique Silver Luminogram Print, Two spheres and triangle with shade
ATO>MIC #13, Unique Silver Luminogram Print, Two spheres and triangle with shade

ATO>MIC #13, Unique Silver Luminogram Print, Two spheres and triangle with shade

Located in London, GB

ATO>MIC #13, 2020 Unique Gelatin Silver Print/ Luminogram and Photogram technique, Printed on tea infused fibre based paper, Framed: custom made frame with anti-reflective art glass Print size: 23 x 18 cm Framed: 38 x 35.5 cm Unique Series: ATO>MIC Signed and dated in pencil on print's verso Certificate of Authenticity provided The 3D concepts that were first expanded in the same art movement by El Lissitzky a hundred years ago, are also explored here by Jackson’s drowned thin line within the third of the image. In his vision, the line reflects a shelf with the object on top, by adding the weight to it, the gravity pushing them down. "At first glance the viewer may only see geometric spherical shapes with added lines and rectangles on tea toned Silver Gelatin paper. "The supremacy of pure artistic feeling" rather than the visual depiction of objects assign to the art movement of Suprematism comes to one's mind. Similarly, like a giant of abstract art Kasimir Malevich, Jackson wants the viewer to look further, deeper than one might usually. The feeling of 'sensation' of the ATO>MIC prints, the sharpness of the forms, the intensity defying its size to condensed 9 x 7 inches' paper, make it all the more dramatic to look at. It takes the viewer to another level of fantastical world of creation." About the Artist: Michael G Jackson...

Category

2010s Suprematist Art

Materials

Archival Paper, Black and White, Color, Silver Gelatin, Photographic Pap...

Abstraction Suprematiste

Abstraction Suprematiste

Located in New York, NY

Signed in black, l.r. Oil on canvas 9.4 x 13 inches (23.9 x 33 cm) 17 x 21.5 inches (43.2 x 54.6 cm), framed This photograph is offered by ClampArt, located in New York City.

Category

20th Century Suprematist Art

Materials

Oil

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“An Orange Sale - Savannah, 1914” Georgia Impressionist African American Oil
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By William Schwartz

Located in Marco Island, FL

Chicago Modernist, William Schwartz, painted this dynamic landscape of an artist painting en plein air. He studied at the Art Institute of Chicago shortly after emigrating to the Un...

Category

Mid-20th Century Suprematist Art

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“Crossroads, c. 1940” WPA Polish-American Expressionist Modernist Oil Signed
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"The Champ, 1942" Joe Louis "Brown Bomber" Boxer Portrait Ex-Museum Oil Signed
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“The Champ, 1942” by Theodore Fried (1902-1980) This important portrait by Hungarian-American artist Theodore Fried depicts the legendary boxer Joe Louis aka “The Brown Bomber” and ...

Category

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Materials

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Located in Yardley, PA

An exceptional work by George Waller Parker (1888-1957) of a home in the South Carolina Lowcountry. Perhaps the best example of Parker’s work to be offered in recent decades, this w...

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Rare Jacobean Portrait on Panel Lady Elizabeth Wheeler née Cole 1623 Historical
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Rare Jacobean Portrait on Panel Lady Elizabeth Wheeler née Cole 1623 Historical

By Cornelius Johnson

Located in London, GB

A Rare Jacobean Portrait of Lady Elizabeth Wheeler (née Cole), 1623 Attributed to Cornelius Johnson (1593–1661) This remarkably rare early oil on panel, presented by Titan Fine Art, has emerged as far more than an anonymous “Portrait of a Lady.” Preserved in outstanding condition—its surface retaining exceptional clarity in the lace and textiles—it has only recently been reunited with the identity of its sitter: Elizabeth Cole (1607–1670), later Lady Elizabeth Wheeler, a Westminster gentlewoman whose later life brought her into intimate royal service as laundress for His Majesty’s person. That combination—high quality, uncommon survival, a newly identified sitter, and a life that intersects directly with the last acts of Charles I—places this portrait in a category of genuine rarity. It is not simply a beautiful Jacobean likeness; it is a rediscovered historical document - legible and compelling. The sitter is presented half-length against a dark ground, enclosed within a painted sculpted oval surround that functions like an architectural frame. This device, fashionable in the 1620s, concentrates the viewer’s attention and heightens the sense of social presentation: the sitter appears both physically and symbolically “set apart,” as if viewed through a refined aperture. The portrait’s immediate power, however, lies in the costume—an ensemble of striking modernity for c. 1623 and rendered with a precision that survives with remarkable crispness. She wears a deep green gown—a fitted overgown with open sleeves—over a finely embroidered linen jacket (a stiffened bodice/waistcoat garment). The sleeves form pronounced “wings” at the shoulder, a structurally assertive fashion detail of the early 1620s that enlarges the silhouette and signals sophistication. Beneath the green overlayer, the white linen jacket is richly ornamented in gilt embroidery. The goldwork is arranged as scrolling foliate forms—looping, curling tendrils punctuated by seed-like stippling—organised into balanced compartments across the bodice and sleeves. The motifs read as stylised botanical forms with rounded fruit-like terminals and leaf elements: not literal naturalism, but controlled abundance. The technique is described with extraordinary intelligence, mimicking couched metallic thread through patterned, “stitched” marks, while tiny dots and short dashes create a lively tactile shimmer. This embroidered jacket sits above a newly fashionable high-waisted, sheer apron or overskirt. The translucent fabric falls in soft vertical folds and is articulated with narrow lace-edged bands, giving the skirt a crisp rhythm of alternating sheer and patterned strips. At the neck, a fine ruff frames the face: a disciplined structure of pleated linen finished with delicate lace. Draped diagonally across the torso are long gold chains, painted to suggest weight and metallic gleam; they function both as ornament and as a further signifier of status. The cumulative effect is controlled luxury: she is not overloaded with jewels, but clothed in textiles whose cost and craftsmanship speak unmistakably. The recent sitter’s identification rests on heraldic and genealogical analysis: the arms shown on the painting correspond to those recorded for several families in armorial sources, but when the lines of descent are tested against survival and chronology, the viable bearer by 1623 resolves to Cole, and—crucially—to the London branch. That resolution matters because it anchors the portrait to a very specific social world: London/Westminster civic gentry and Crown administration, the milieu in which portraiture served as both self-fashioning and social instrument. The recent identification of the sitter (the London Cole branch of the family) is not merely genealogical; it has direct implications for authorship. A London-based mercantile or civic-gentry family would have ready access to leading immigrant artists, familiarity with heraldic display conventions, and the means to commission oil on panel, still standard among Netherlandish-trained painters. In that context, the portrait’s age inscription and date become especially revealing. The painting states the sitter to be nineteen years of age. Yet Elizabeth Cole’s birth in 1607 suggests she would be younger if the portrait is dated as early as 1623. The key insight is that the “incorrect” age is best understood not as a mistake but as a deliberate social adjustment, a performative statement rather than a documentary one. The most persuasive explanation is strategic. Portraits of high-status unmarried women were frequently made in connection with marriage negotiations. In the early 1620s, Elizabeth’s future husband, William Wheeler, was resident abroad at Middelburg in Zeeland in the Dutch Republic. If a portrait was intended to support or facilitate a match with an educated, ambitious man—“a man of learning and letters,” —then presenting a seventeen-year-old as nineteen would subtly reposition her as more mature and more nearly a peer in age, Wheeler being around twenty-two. The portrait thus becomes an instrument of alliance, not merely a likeness: an image designed to persuade, reassure, and elevate. This reading aligns perfectly with the period’s wider conditions. The early 1620s in England were charged with anxiety and expectation: James I’s later reign was marked by court faction, diplomatic tension, and the pressures of European conflict. The so-called “art market” was inseparable from these dynamics. Portraiture flourished because it served multiple functions: it fixed lineage, advertised alliance, signalled readiness for marriage, and projected the stability of elite households in an uncertain world. For Westminster families whose power came through office, portraiture was also a declaration of belonging—proof that administrative elites possessed the cultural polish traditionally associated with older aristocratic rank. Elizabeth’s later life vindicates the portrait’s impression of steadiness. Although no record survives of her marriage ceremony to William Wheeler, wills suggest she had married him by the mid-1630s, and there are strong grounds—consistent with the portrait’s implications—for a union already in place by the early 1630s, possibly earlier. Wheeler himself rose rapidly. By 1639 he held a manor at Westbury Leigh in Wiltshire and sought letters of denization due to overseas birth, enabling him to stand as Member of Parliament for Westbury. He leased the principal manor of Westbury the following year, coinciding with his election. In government service he became Remembrancer of the Exchequer and held office across regime change, a testament to administrative skill and political pragmatism. It is Elizabeth, however, who makes this portrait exceptional. She became laundress for His Majesty’s person, responsible for the washing and oversight of the King’s personal linen—an office that, despite its domestic description, required unusual trust, discretion, and access. Her role becomes visible in 1643 when she was granted a warrant signed by the Speaker of the House of Commons to follow the King to Oxford with her servant after the outbreak of the Civil War. She continued to serve during the King’s captivity after 1646, and at Carisbrooke Castle in 1647 she and her maid were implicated in smuggling secret correspondence to and from Charles I, in service of escape plans. 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On the Beach.  Woman Reading.  Mid-Century Chicago Modernist Oil Painting.
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Located in Marco Island, FL

Chicago Modernist, William Schwartz, painted this intimate painting of a woman reading titled On the Beach. He studied at the Art Institute of Chicago shortly after emigrating to th...

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Previously Available Items
Stars
Stars

Wassily KandinskyStars, 1939

Sold

H 13.78 in W 10.24 in D 0.04 in

Stars

By Wassily Kandinsky

Located in OPOLE, PL

Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944) - Stars Lithograph from 1938. Dimensions of work: 35 x 26 cm Publisher: Tériade, Paris. Some signs of aging on the bottom. The work is in Excellent...

Category

1930s Suprematist Art

Materials

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Original Suprematist painting, signed and titled, protege of Kazimir Malevich
Original Suprematist painting, signed and titled, protege of Kazimir Malevich

Original Suprematist painting, signed and titled, protege of Kazimir Malevich

Located in New York, NY

"They will understand us in 100 years" Lazar Khidekel, ca. 1920 Suprematist, Avant-Garde Russian artist and student of Malevich Lazar Khidekel Художник: Хидекель Лазарь Маркович Or...

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ATO>MIC #11, Unique Silver Luminogram Print, Two Spheres; Moon and Sun like...

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Located in London, GB

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Futurist Geometric Homage, Blue and Pink, Positive vs Negative Circles & Squares
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Suprematist Rocky Stack, Organic Shapes and Transparencies in Blue & White, 2022

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Pastel Divisions, Suprematist Style in Soft Tones, Yellow and Pink Geometry 2022

Pastel Divisions, Suprematist Style in Soft Tones, Yellow and Pink Geometry 2022

By Ryan Rivadeneyra

Located in Barcelona, ES

"Pastel Divisions" is a hand-painted acrylic painting on high-quality 300g paper by artist Ryan Rivadeneyra. This series focuses on geometric patterns and combinations of shapes to ...

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Modern Native Shapes in Mauve and Green, Tan Background, Mid-Century Style, 2022
Modern Native Shapes in Mauve and Green, Tan Background, Mid-Century Style, 2022

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Located in Barcelona, ES

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Lithographie Originale III
Lithographie Originale III

Lithographie Originale III

By Joan Miró

Located in Kansas City, MO

Joan Miró Lithographie Originale III Color Lithograph Year: 1981 Size: 12.5 × 9.6 inches Catalogue Raisonné: Cramer, Der Lithograph VI, 1976-1981 Publisher: Maeght Editeur, Paris, Fr...

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Suprematist art for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Suprematist art available for sale on 1stDibs. Works in this style were very popular during the 21st Century and Contemporary, but contemporary artists have continued to produce works inspired by this movement. If you’re looking to add art created in this style to introduce contrast in an otherwise neutral space in your home, the works available on 1stDibs include elements of blue and other colors. Many Pop art paintings were created by popular artists on 1stDibs, including Carol Diehl, Tom Martinelli, Alina Karo, and Tayo Heuser. Frequently made by artists working with Paint, and Paper and other materials, all of these pieces for sale are unique and have attracted attention over the years. Not every interior allows for large Suprematist art, so small editions measuring 5.25 inches across are also available. Prices for art made by famous or emerging artists can differ depending on medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $392 and tops out at $14,500, while the average work sells for $2,250.