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Sarah Anne Johnson

Bird and Hibiscus
Bird and Hibiscus

Bird and Hibiscus

Located in Fairlawn, OH

, Morton Bartlett, Eugene Bellocq, Andrew Bush, Sally Gall, Luigi Ghirri, Andrea Grützner, Sarah Anne

Category

1980s Naturalistic Landscape Photography

Materials

Photographic Paper

Recent Sales

Yellowstone Sunset

Sarah Anne JohnsonYellowstone Sunset, 2017

Unavailable

H 33.75 in W 51 in

Yellowstone Sunset

By Sarah Anne Johnson

Located in New York, NY

Sarah Anne Johnson’s work explores the dichotomy between reality and perception. Johnson received her

Category

2010s Contemporary Landscape Photography

Materials

Acrylic, Archival Pigment

Black Box

Sarah Anne JohnsonBlack Box, 2010

Unavailable

H 28 in W 42 in

Black Box

By Sarah Anne Johnson

Located in New York, NY

This item is framed. Framed dimensions are 35 x 49 inches. During October 2009 Sarah Anne Johnson

Category

2010s Conceptual Color Photography

Materials

Archival Ink, C Print, India Ink, Acrylic, Gouache

Ripple

Sarah Anne JohnsonRipple, 2011

Unavailable

H 13.75 in W 30 in

Ripple

By Sarah Anne Johnson

Located in New York, NY

This item is framed. Framed dimensions are 26 x 36 inches. During October 2009 Sarah Anne Johnson

Category

2010s Conceptual Color Photography

Materials

C Print, Archival Ink, Permanent Marker

Pink Sky and Wind

Sarah Anne JohnsonPink Sky and Wind

Unavailable

H 30 in W 20 in

Pink Sky and Wind

By Sarah Anne Johnson

Located in New York, NY

In this series, Johnson focuses on photographic tropes- landscape scenes from a variety of places

Category

2010s Conceptual Color Photography

Materials

Archival Tape, C Print

Black Hole Winnipeg Beach

Black Hole Winnipeg Beach

By Sarah Anne Johnson

Located in New York, NY

In this series, Johnson focuses on photographic tropes- landscape scenes from a variety of places

Category

2010s Conceptual Color Photography

Materials

Acrylic, C Print

Black Sun #2 (Pyramid)

Black Sun #2 (Pyramid)

By Sarah Anne Johnson

Located in New York, NY

. In this series, Johnson focuses on photographic tropes- landscape scenes from a variety of places

Category

2010s Conceptual Color Photography

Materials

C Print, Epoxy Resin

Birds and Blue Sky

Birds and Blue Sky

By Sarah Anne Johnson

Located in New York, NY

In this series, Johnson focuses on photographic tropes- landscape scenes from a variety of places

Category

2010s Conceptual Color Photography

Materials

Archival Tape, C Print

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A Close Look at Conceptual Art

In 1967, artist Sol LeWitt wrote that in “Conceptual art the idea or concept is the most important aspect of the work.” He was giving a name to an art movement that had emerged in the 1960s in which artists were less focused on their medium being something traditionally “artistic” and instead engaged in using any object, movement, form, action or place to express an idea.

LeWitt’s work was featured alongside an assemblage of notes, drawings and outlines by other artists in “Working Drawings and Other Visible Things on Paper Not Necessarily Meant to Be Viewed as Art,” a groundbreaking show at New York City’s School of Visual Arts curated by Mel Bochner, another leading exponent of Conceptualism. Building on radical 20th-century statements, like Fountain (1917) by French artist Marcel Duchamp, Conceptual artists around Europe and North and South America were not interested in the commercial art scene and rather directly challenged its systems and values.

Stretching into the 1970s, this movement has also been called Post-Object art and Dematerialized art. Conceptual art reflected a larger era of social and political upheaval. Pieces associated with the style range from Roelof Louw’s Soul City (Pyramid of Oranges) (1967) — a work of installation art that sees fresh oranges stacked into a pyramid from which visitors are allowed to take one orange away — to On Kawara’s “Today” series, which saw the Japanese artist carefully painting a date in white acrylic on canvases consisting of a single color from 1966 to his death in 2014. Artists such as Ed Ruscha, who created the Twentysix Gasoline Stations book — a collection of photos of gas stations that is widely said to be the first modern artists’ book — made photography a major platform for Conceptual art, as did Bruce Nauman, who burned one of Ruscha's books and then photographed it for his own.

Conceptual art’s legacy of questioning artistic authorship, ownership and how to work with complex ideas of space and time had a significant influence on the decades of culture that followed, and it continues to inform art today.

The collection of Conceptual photography, paintings and sculptures on 1stDibs includes artworks by John Baldessari, Jenny Holzer, Lawrence Weiner, Joseph Kosuth and others.

Finding the Right Color-photography for You

Color photography evokes emotion that can bring a viewer into the scene. It can transport one to faraway places or back into the past.

The first color photograph, taken in 1861, was more of an exercise in science than art. Photographer Thomas Sutton and physicist James Clerk Maxwell used three separate exposures of a tartan ribbon — filtered through red, green and blue — and composited them into a single image, resulting in the first multicolor representation of an object.

Before this innovation, photographs were often tinted by hand. By the 1890s, color photography processes were introduced based on that 1860s experiment. In the early 20th century, autochromes brought color photography to a commercial audience.

Now color photography is widely available, with these historic photographs documenting moments and scenes that are still vivid generations later. Photographers in the 20th and 21st centuries have offered new perspectives in the evolving field of modern color photography with gripping portraiture, snow-capped landscapes, stunning architecture and lots more.

In the voluminous collection of photography on 1stDibs, find vibrant full-color images by Slim Aarons, Helen Levitt, Gordon Parks, Stefanie Schneider, Steve McCurry and other artists. Bring visual interest to any corner of your home with color photography — introduce a salon-style gallery hang or another arrangement that best fits your space.