Skip to main content

Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Art Dealers Association of America (ADAA)
Art Dealers Association of America (ADAA)
Founded in 1962, the Art Dealers Association of America is a vetted community of more than 180 top-tier galleries across the United States. Working with these member galleries, ADAA appraisers offer assessment services for artworks spanning from the Renaissance to the present day. The ADAA also arranges public forums on important art-related topics and hosts The Art Show, presented each year at New York’s Park Avenue Armory, which stands out among art fairs for its acclaimed selection of curated booths — many of which are one-artist exhibitions.
to
13
132
97
82
99
279
Overall Width
to
Overall Height
to
23
139
516
1
3
4
4
6
16
18
18
310
106
50
26
16
9
1
1
317
242
120
181
123
118
91
90
89
44
42
39
36
33
29
29
25
25
24
23
18
18
17
650
503
404
299
138
37
31
29
25
24
131
12
689
Mt. Etna from Taormina
By Thomas Fransioli
Located in New York, NY
Thomas Fransioli, born in 1906 in Seattle, Washington, trained as an architect at the University of Pennsylvania. He worked as an architect before his service in World War II. Largel...
Category

20th Century American Realist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

#15-1979
By Stanley Twardowicz
Located in New York, NY
Signed (on stretcher): Twardowicz Stanley Twardowicz (1917–2008), a one-time orphan, Golden Gloves boxer, professional baseball player and auto worker, emerged from a hardscrabble u...
Category

Late 20th Century American Modern Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Interior of a Japanese House
By Harry Humphrey Moore
Located in New York, NY
Harry Humphrey Moore led a cosmopolitan lifestyle, dividing his time between Europe, New York City, and California. This globe-trotting painter was also active in Morocco, and most importantly, he was among the first generation of American artists to live and work in Japan, where he depicted temples, tombs, gardens, merchants, children, and Geisha girls. Praised by fellow painters such as Thomas Eakins, John Singer Sargent, and Jean-Léon Gérôme, Moore’s fame was attributed to his exotic subject matter, as well as to the “brilliant coloring, delicate brush work [sic] and the always present depth of feeling” that characterized his work (Eugene A. Hajdel, Harry H. Moore, American 19th Century: Collection of Information on Harry Humphrey Moore, 19th Century Artist, Based on His Scrap Book and Other Data [Jersey City, New Jersey: privately published, 1950], p. 8). Born in New York City, Moore was the son of Captain George Humphrey, an affluent shipbuilder, and a descendant of the English painter, Ozias Humphrey (1742–1810). He became deaf at age three, and later went to special schools where he learned lip-reading and sign language. After developing an interest in art as a young boy, Moore studied painting with the portraitist Samuel Waugh in Philadelphia, where he met and became friendly with Eakins. He also received instruction from the painter Louis Bail in New Haven, Connecticut. In 1864, Moore attended classes at the Mark Hopkins Institute in San Francisco, and until 1907, he would visit the “City by the Bay” regularly. In 1865, Moore went to Europe, spending time in Munich before traveling to Paris, where, in October 1866, he resumed his formal training in Gérôme’s atelier, drawing inspiration from his teacher’s emphasis on authentic detail and his taste for picturesque genre subjects. There, Moore worked alongside Eakins, who had mastered sign language in order to communicate with his friend. In March 1867, Moore enrolled at the prestigious École des Beaux-Arts, honing his drawing skills under the tutelage of Adolphe Yvon, among other leading French painters. In December 1869, Moore traveled around Spain with Eakins and the Philadelphia engraver, William Sartain. In 1870, he went to Madrid, where he met the Spanish painters Mariano Fortuny and Martin Rico y Ortega. When Eakins and Sartain returned to Paris, Moore remained in Spain, painting depictions of Moorish life in cities such as Segovia and Granada and fraternizing with upper-crust society. In 1872, he married Isabella de Cistue, the well-connected daughter of Colonel Cistue of Saragossa, who was related to the Queen of Spain. For the next two-and-a-half years, the couple lived in Morocco, where Moore painted portraits, interiors, and streetscapes, often accompanied by an armed guard (courtesy of the Grand Sharif) when painting outdoors. (For this aspect of Moore’s oeuvre, see Gerald M. Ackerman, American Orientalists [Courbevoie, France: ACR Édition, 1994], pp. 135–39.) In 1873, he went to Rome, spending two years studying with Fortuny, whose lively technique, bright palette, and penchant for small-format genre scenes made a lasting impression on him. By this point in his career, Moore had emerged as a “rapid workman” who could “finish a picture of given size and containing a given subject quicker than most painters whose style is more simple and less exacting” (New York Times, as quoted in Hajdel, p. 23). In 1874, Moore settled in New York City, maintaining a studio on East 14th Street, where he would remain until 1880. During these years, he participated intermittently in the annuals of the National Academy of Design in New York and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia, exhibiting Moorish subjects and views of Spain. A well-known figure in Bay Area art circles, Moore had a one-man show at the Snow & May Gallery in San Francisco in 1877, and a solo exhibition at the Bohemian Club, also in San Francisco, in 1880. Indeed, Moore fraternized with many members of the city’s cultural elite, including Katherine Birdsall Johnson (1834–1893), a philanthropist and art collector who owned The Captive (current location unknown), one of his Orientalist subjects. (Johnson’s ownership of The Captive was reported in L. K., “A Popular Paris Artist,” New York Times, July 23, 1893.) According to one contemporary account, Johnson invited Moore and his wife to accompany her on a trip to Japan in 1880 and they readily accepted. (For Johnson’s connection to Moore’s visit to Japan, see Emma Willard and Her Pupils; or, Fifty Years of Troy Female Seminary [New York: Mrs. Russell Sage, 1898]. Johnson’s bond with the Moores was obviously strong, evidenced by the fact that she left them $25,000.00 in her will, which was published in the San Francisco Call on December 10, 1893.) That Moore would be receptive to making the arduous voyage across the Pacific is understandable in view of his penchant for foreign motifs. Having opened its doors to trade with the West in 1854, and in the wake of Japan’s presence at the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition of 1876, American artists were becoming increasingly fascinated by what one commentator referred to as that “ideal dreamland of the poet” (L. K., “A Popular Paris Artist”). Moore, who was in Japan during 1880–81, became one of the first American artists to travel to the “land of the rising sun,” preceded only by the illustrator, William Heime, who went there in 1851 in conjunction with the Japanese expedition of Commodore Matthew C. Perry; Edward Kern, a topographical artist and explorer who mapped the Japanese coast in 1855; and the Boston landscapist, Winckleworth Allan Gay, a resident of Japan from 1877 to 1880. More specifically, as William H. Gerdts has pointed out, Moore was the “first American painter to seriously address the appearance and mores of the Japanese people” (William H. Gerdts, American Artists in Japan, 1859–1925, exhib. cat. [New York: Hollis Taggart Galleries, 1996], p. 5). During his sojourn in Nippon (which means, “The Land of the Rising Sun”), Moore spent time in locales such as Tokyo, Yokohama, Kyoto, Nikko, and Osaka, carefully observing the local citizenry, their manners and mode of dress, and the country’s distinctive architecture. Working on easily portable panels, he created about sixty scenes of daily life, among them this depiction of an interior of a dwelling. The location of the view is unknown, but the presence of a rustic rail fence demarcating a yard bordering a distant house flanked by tall trees, shrubs and some blossoming fruit trees, suggests that the work likely portrays a building in a city suburb or a small village. In his book, Japanese Homes and Their Surroundings, Edward S. Morse (an American zoologist, orientalist, and “japanophile” who taught at Tokyo Imperial University from 1877 to 1879, and visited Japan again in 1891 and 1882) noted the “openness and accessibility of the Japanese house...
Category

Late 19th Century Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Oil, Wood Panel

NO.SNOW
Located in Houston, TX
NO.SNOW, 2014 gouache on paper mounted on canvas, mounted on panel 29 x 22 inches If some artists’ studios are factories, efficient and methodical, and some are gardens, cultiva...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Gouache, Wood Panel, Canvas, Archival Paper

Lilies
By John Moore
Located in New York, NY
Signed and dated (at lower right): MOORE 21
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Oil

Untitled
By Louis Elle (Ferdinand)
Located in New York, NY
Oil on canvas, 14 x 12 in.
Category

Late 20th Century American Modern Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Spill (Ashdod)
By Julie Heffernan
Located in New York, NY
Oil on canvas
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Oil

SOLIS (Sunlight)
By David Ligare
Located in New York, NY
Signed and dated (at lower right): L; (on verso): D. Ligare / 2024
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

World Trade Center Reflecting Pools and Harbor #4
By Diana Horowitz
Located in New York, NY
Diana Horowitz painted World Trade Center Reflecting Pools and Harbor #1 during her tenure as a guest artist on the 48th floor of the re-built 7 World Trade Center. When 7 World Trad...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Linen, Oil

Bilboquet
By Gregory Amenoff
Located in New York, NY
Gregory Amenoff’s work has been the subject of numerous solo and group exhibitions throughout the country, including the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Cleveland Museum of...
Category

20th Century Abstract Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

DISCERE (To Learn)
By David Ligare
Located in New York, NY
Signed (at lower right): L; (on verso): D. Ligare / 2024
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

VIRTUS (Virtue)
By David Ligare
Located in New York, NY
Signed (at lower right): L; (on the back): D. Ligare / 2024
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

ORDINE NATURAE (The Order of Nature)
By David Ligare
Located in New York, NY
Signed (at lower right): L; (on verso): D. Ligare / 2015
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Still Life with Green Cabbages
By Amy Weiskopf
Located in New York, NY
Signed (at lower right): A. Weiskopf
Category

2010s Realist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Linen, Oil

Jardin des Tuileries, Paris
By Edmund Quincy
Located in New York, NY
Signed (lower right): Quincy
Category

20th Century American Realist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Still Life with Peach on Cloth
By David Ligare
Located in New York, NY
Signed and dated (at lower right): L; (on verso): D. Ligare / 2014
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Splinters of a Secret Sky - Splinters
By Angela Fraleigh
Located in New York, NY
Signed (on verso): AF/2021
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic Polymer, Oil, Acrylic

Spill (Climbers)
By Julie Heffernan
Located in New York, NY
Oil on canvas
Category

2010s Abstract Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Untitled (Dead Low)
By Colin Hunt
Located in New York, NY
In Colin Hunt’s new paintings, myriad tiny rocks, grains of sand, and strands of rockweed form a coastal beach, while lush forests pierce a crystalline sky. Elsewhere, palpable mists...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Egg Tempera, Panel

Still Life with Squash and Pink Pitcher
By Amy Weiskopf
Located in New York, NY
Signed (at lower right): A. Weiskopf
Category

2010s Realist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Linen, Oil

No. 3 -1960
By Stanley Twardowicz
Located in New York, NY
Signed (on stretcher): Stanley Twardowicz Stanley Twardowicz (1917–2008), a one-time orphan, Golden Gloves boxer, professional baseball player and auto worker, emerged from a hards...
Category

Late 20th Century American Modern Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Enamel

SOLAR #1
By Julie Hedrick
Located in New York, NY
JULIE HEDRICK SOLAR #1, 2022 oil on canvas 24 x 24 in. 61 x 61 cm.
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

SOLAR #1
SOLAR #1
$15,200 Sale Price
20% Off
Spill (Birds)
By Julie Heffernan
Located in New York, NY
Oil on canvas
Category

2010s Abstract Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Italian Garden in Acadia
By John Moore
Located in New York, NY
Signed (at lower right): MOORE
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Oil

Many-Worlds Interpretation (C.D.H.I.A.H.)
By Colin Hunt
Located in New York, NY
Abstract image made using egg tempera on hardboard panel.
Category

2010s Abstract Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Egg Tempera

Prop
By Randall Exon
Located in New York, NY
Oil on canvas
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Oil, Canvas

In an Absent Dream
By Angela Fraleigh
Located in New York, NY
Unsigned
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Charcoal, Oil

Turn Your Eyes to the Heavens and Say Three Times: I do not have to be good
By Angela Fraleigh
Located in New York, NY
Is it discomfort, or excitement, that you feel when you watch these women languidly roust, or subtly drift asleep? Do you happily play the voyeur, seduced by their beauty and the opu...
Category

2010s Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Oil, Acrylic

A Pang of Vivid Light
By Angela Fraleigh
Located in New York, NY
Signed and dated (on verso): "Angela Fraleigh 2021"
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Linen, Oil

In Search of Solitude
By Robert Minervini
Located in New York, NY
Signed and dated (on verso): Robert Minervini / 2020-2021
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

LAOCOON'S FOLLY
By Carol K. Brown
Located in New York, NY
abstract watercolor and ink painting of intertwined tubular forms on archival paper.
Category

2010s Abstract Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Ink, Watercolor, Archival Paper

STUDY FOR "CAT'S CADLE"
By Carol K. Brown
Located in New York, NY
abstract watercolor and ink painting of intertwined tubular forms on archival paper
Category

2010s Abstract Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Ink, Watercolor, Archival Paper

White Sand
By Randall Exon
Located in New York, NY
Oil on panel
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Oil, Panel

No. 20-1954
By Stanley Twardowicz
Located in New York, NY
Stanley Twardowicz (1917–2008), a one-time orphan, Golden Gloves boxer, professional baseball player and auto worker, emerged from a hardscrabble upbringing in Detroit to become a po...
Category

Mid-20th Century Abstract Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Enamel

SEEDLING I
By Valerie B Hird
Located in New York, NY
oil on Arches paper
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Oil, Paper

SEEDLING I
$12,000 Sale Price
20% Off
Double Dusk
By John Moore
Located in New York, NY
Signed and dated (at lower right): MOORE '18
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Wait For Me There
By Angela Fraleigh
Located in New York, NY
Signed and dated (on verso): Angela Fraleigh 2021
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil, Panel

MUTE 1
By Francisca Sutil
Located in New York, NY
gouache and Chinese ink on paper
Category

Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

The Excluded (2 Vases)
By Robert Minervini
Located in New York, NY
Signed (on verso): Robert Minervini / 2019 / 2 Vases
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Tight Shelf
By Robert Minervini
Located in New York, NY
Signed and dated (on verso): Robert Minervini 2019
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Japanese Tea Garden
By Harry Humphrey Moore
Located in New York, NY
Harry Humphrey Moore led a cosmopolitan lifestyle, dividing his time between Europe, New York City, and California. This globe-trotting painter was also active in Morocco, and most importantly, he was among the first generation of American artists to live and work in Japan, where he depicted temples, tombs, gardens, merchants, children, and Geisha girls. Praised by fellow painters such as Thomas Eakins, John Singer Sargent, and Jean-Léon Gérôme, Moore’s fame was attributed to his exotic subject matter, as well as to the “brilliant coloring, delicate brush work [sic] and the always present depth of feeling” that characterized his work (Eugene A. Hajdel, Harry H. Moore, American 19th Century: Collection of Information on Harry Humphrey Moore, 19th Century Artist, Based on His Scrap Book and Other Data [Jersey City, New Jersey: privately published, 1950], p. 8). Born in New York City, Moore was the son of Captain George Humphrey, an affluent shipbuilder, and a descendant of the English painter, Ozias Humphrey (1742–1810). He became deaf at age three, and later went to special schools where he learned lip-reading and sign language. After developing an interest in art as a young boy, Moore studied painting with the portraitist Samuel Waugh in Philadelphia, where he met and became friendly with Eakins. He also received instruction from the painter Louis Bail in New Haven, Connecticut. In 1864, Moore attended classes at the Mark Hopkins Institute in San Francisco, and until 1907, he would visit the “City by the Bay” regularly. In 1865, Moore went to Europe, spending time in Munich before traveling to Paris, where, in October 1866, he resumed his formal training in Gérôme’s atelier, drawing inspiration from his teacher’s emphasis on authentic detail and his taste for picturesque genre subjects. There, Moore worked alongside Eakins, who had mastered sign language in order to communicate with his friend. In March 1867, Moore enrolled at the prestigious École des Beaux-Arts, honing his drawing skills under the tutelage of Adolphe Yvon, among other leading French painters. In December 1869, Moore traveled around Spain with Eakins and the Philadelphia engraver, William Sartain. In 1870, he went to Madrid, where he met the Spanish painters Mariano Fortuny and Martin Rico y Ortega. When Eakins and Sartain returned to Paris, Moore remained in Spain, painting depictions of Moorish life in cities such as Segovia and Granada and fraternizing with upper-crust society. In 1872, he married Isabella de Cistue, the well-connected daughter of Colonel Cistue of Saragossa, who was related to the Queen of Spain. For the next two-and-a-half years, the couple lived in Morocco, where Moore painted portraits, interiors, and streetscapes, often accompanied by an armed guard (courtesy of the Grand Sharif) when painting outdoors. (For this aspect of Moore’s oeuvre, see Gerald M. Ackerman, American Orientalists [Courbevoie, France: ACR Édition, 1994], pp. 135–39.) In 1873, he went to Rome, spending two years studying with Fortuny, whose lively technique, bright palette, and penchant for small-format genre scenes made a lasting impression on him. By this point in his career, Moore had emerged as a “rapid workman” who could “finish a picture of given size and containing a given subject quicker than most painters whose style is more simple and less exacting” (New York Times, as quoted in Hajdel, p. 23). In 1874, Moore settled in New York City, maintaining a studio on East 14th Street, where he would remain until 1880. During these years, he participated intermittently in the annuals of the National Academy of Design in New York and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia, exhibiting Moorish subjects and views of Spain. A well-known figure in Bay Area art circles, Moore had a one-man show at the Snow & May Gallery in San Francisco in 1877, and a solo exhibition at the Bohemian Club, also in San Francisco, in 1880. Indeed, Moore fraternized with many members of the city’s cultural elite, including Katherine Birdsall Johnson (1834–1893), a philanthropist and art collector who owned The Captive (current location unknown), one of his Orientalist subjects. (Johnson’s ownership of The Captive was reported in L. K., “A Popular Paris Artist,” New York Times, July 23, 1893.) According to one contemporary account, Johnson invited Moore and his wife to accompany her on a trip to Japan in 1880 and they readily accepted. (For Johnson’s connection to Moore’s visit to Japan, see Emma Willard and Her Pupils; or, Fifty Years of Troy Female Seminary [New York: Mrs. Russell Sage, 1898]. Johnson’s bond with the Moores was obviously strong, evidenced by the fact that she left them $25,000.00 in her will, which was published in the San Francisco Call on December 10, 1893.) That Moore would be receptive to making the arduous voyage across the Pacific is understandable in view of his penchant for foreign motifs. Having opened its doors to trade with the West in 1854, and in the wake of Japan’s presence at the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition of 1876, American artists were becoming increasingly fascinated by what one commentator referred to as that “ideal dreamland of the poet” (L. K., “A Popular Paris Artist”). Moore, who was in Japan during 1880–81, became one of the first American artists to travel to the “land of the rising sun,” preceded only by the illustrator, William Heime, who went there in 1851 in conjunction with the Japanese expedition of Commodore Matthew C. Perry; Edward Kern, a topographical artist and explorer who mapped the Japanese coast in 1855; and the Boston landscapist, Winckleworth Allan Gay, a resident of Japan from 1877 to 1880. More specifically, as William H. Gerdts has pointed out, Moore was the “first American painter to seriously address the appearance and mores of the Japanese people” (William H. Gerdts, American Artists in Japan, 1859–1925, exhib. cat. [New York: Hollis Taggart Galleries, 1996], p. 5). During his sojourn in Japan, Moore spent time in Tokyo, Yokohama, Kyoto, Nikko, and Osaka, carefully observing the local citizenry, their manners and mode of dress, and the country’s distinctive architecture. Working on easily portable wood panels, he created about sixty scenes of daily life, among them this picturesque vignette of a Japanese tea garden...
Category

Late 19th Century Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Oil, Wood Panel

The Stars Rise, the Moon Bends Her Arc
By Angela Fraleigh
Located in New York, NY
Signed and dated (on verso): Angela Fraleigh 2021
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Linen, Oil

Vestibule
By Randall Exon
Located in New York, NY
Signed and dated (at lower right): Randall Exon 2016
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Oil

Shaking to Sound the Silent Skies
By Angela Fraleigh
Located in New York, NY
Signed and dated (on verso): Angela Fraleigh 2021
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Linen, Oil

Pears in a Row
By Stone Roberts
Located in New York, NY
Signed and dated (at lower right): J. STONE ROBERTS./ 2004.
Category

Early 2000s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Oil

Untitled
By Randall Exon
Located in New York, NY
Randall Exon (b. 1956) was born in Vermillion, South Dakota. Exon earned his B.F.A. in painting from Washburn University in Topeka, Kansas, and an M.F.A. at the University of Iowa. I...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Oil, Board

Surface Tension
By Robert Minervini
Located in New York, NY
Robert Minervini (b.1981 Secaucus, NJ) is an artist working in painting, drawing, printmaking, murals, and site-specific public art. His work examines spatial environments and notion...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Paper, Acrylic

Untitled (ZIG 1)
By Ray Spillenger
Located in New York, NY
Oil on paperboard, 20 x 30 in.
Category

Mid-20th Century Abstract Expressionist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Oil

Silent Sparks
By Angela Fraleigh
Located in New York, NY
Signed and dated (on verso): Angela Fraleigh 2021
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil, Panel

Tumbling into Light
By Angela Fraleigh
Located in New York, NY
Signed and dated (on verso): Angela Fraleigh 2021
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil, Panel

Yellow Calla Lily
By Clarence Holbrook Carter
Located in New York, NY
In his long and productive career, Clarence Holbrook Carter followed an independent course. He incorporated an unlikely mixture of stylistic influences, drawing from such disparate s...
Category

Early 20th Century American Realist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Untitled (The Avenue of Stones)
By Colin Hunt
Located in New York, NY
Colin Hunt (b. 1973) is a Brooklyn, NY-based artist working primarily in egg tempera and watercolor. His recent series of landscapes of the Avebury stone circle outside of London are...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Photorealist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Egg Tempera

Sing A Rondelay
Located in Houston, TX
David Aylsworth (born 1966, Tiffin, OH) earned a BFA from Kent State University in 1989 and was an artist resident at the Core Program, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, from 1989-1991. ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Unknown Adventures In Unknown Spaces #14
By Robert Ruello
Located in Houston, TX
Unknown Adventures In Unknown Spaces #14, 2013 acrylic and flashe on canvas, 24 x 30 inches This canvas is part of a recent series of works entitled “Unknown Adventures in Unknown Spaces” by Houston-based painter Robert Ruello. Robert Ruello (b. 1958, New Orleans, LA) lives and works in Houston TX. He received an MFA from Columbia University (1997), a BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (1987), and a BA in Psychology from Loyola University, New Orleans, LA (1982). From 1987-89 he was an artist-in-residence at the Core Program, Glassell School of Art, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX. His recent exhibitions include solo shows at Lone Star College, Woodlands, TX; Texas A&M University, Commerce, TX; and the group exhibitions Mapping Galveston, Galveston Artist Residency, Galveston, TX, and In Plain Sight, McClain Gallery...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Acrylic Polymer

Unknown Adventures In Unknown Spaces #12
By Robert Ruello
Located in Houston, TX
Unknown Adventures In Unknown Spaces #12, 2013 acrylic and flashe on canvas, 30 x 24 inches This canvas is part of a recent series of works entitled “Unknown Adventures in Unknown Spaces” by Houston-based painter Robert Ruello. Robert Ruello (b. 1958, New Orleans, LA) lives and works in Houston TX. He received an MFA from Columbia University (1997), a BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (1987), and a BA in Psychology from Loyola University, New Orleans, LA (1982). From 1987-89 he was an artist-in-residence at the Core Program, Glassell School of Art, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX. His recent exhibitions include solo shows at Lone Star College, Woodlands, TX; Texas A&M University, Commerce, TX; and the group exhibitions Mapping Galveston, Galveston Artist Residency, Galveston, TX, and In Plain Sight, McClain Gallery...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Acrylic Polymer

Beat
By Jim Richard
Located in Houston, TX
Beat, 2012 oil on linen, 24-1/4 x 21-1/2 inches In each saturated color image, Jim Richard seamlessly collages photographs of fine art objects into pictures of living rooms decked in 1960s and 70s...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Linen, Oil

Rose Antiqua
By Robert Minervini
Located in New York, NY
Oil on canvas
Category

2010s Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

A late frost drifted back
By Angela Fraleigh
Located in New York, NY
Signed on back
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Linen, Oil

Chatham Square
By Franz Kline
Located in New York, NY
Signed (at lower left): FRANZ KLINE RECORDED: Elizabeth Johnson, “Franz Kline’s Roots in Coal and Steel—at Allentown Art Museum,” Artblog (December 21. 2012), illus. in color // Tim...
Category

Mid-20th Century Abstract Expressionist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Oil, Canvas

Gloria
By Franz Kline
Located in New York, NY
Signed (at lower right): FK [in monogram} EXHIBITED: Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, October 1–November 24, 1968; Dallas Museum of Fine Arts, Dallas, December 17, 1968–Jan...
Category

Mid-20th Century Abstract Expressionist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Paintings

Materials

Oil, Board

Gloria
Gloria
Price Upon Request

Recently Viewed

View All