Skip to main content

Alyson Belcher Art

to
17
17
Final Season 1064
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
Alyson Belcher's Final Season is a photographic meditation on the fragility and quiet resilience of life, shaped by personal experiences of loss and the witnessing of loved ones in d...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Paper, Carbon Pigment

Final Season 1095
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
Alyson Belcher's Final Season is a photographic meditation on the fragility and quiet resilience of life, shaped by personal experiences of loss and the witnessing of loved ones in d...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Paper, Carbon Pigment

Final Season 1053
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
Alyson Belcher's Final Season is a photographic meditation on the fragility and quiet resilience of life, shaped by personal experiences of loss and the witnessing of loved ones in d...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Paper, Carbon Pigment

Final Season 0941
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
Alyson Belcher's Final Season is a photographic meditation on the fragility and quiet resilience of life, shaped by personal experiences of loss and the witnessing of loved ones in d...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Paper, Carbon Pigment

Remedies and Cures / Jaundice Bitters
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
The artist photographed the 'Jaundice Bitters 'medicine bottle (from her personal collection of antique medicine bottles) in total darkness, a...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Carbon Pigment, Paper

Ice Portals No. 3498 / black and white nature photography
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
Alyson Belcher's Ice Portals series of black and white photographs depict an unusually cold Northwestern winter. These photographs are records of the unique ice formations that the ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Paper, Carbon Pigment

Ice Portals No. 4244 / black and white nature photography
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
Alyson Belcher's Ice Portals series of black and white photographs depict an unusually cold Northwestern winter. These photographs are records of the unique ice formations that the ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Paper, Carbon Pigment

Ice Portals No. 4396 / black and white nature photography
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
Alyson Belcher's Ice Portals series of black and white photographs depict an unusually cold Northwestern winter. These photographs are records of the unique ice formations that the ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Paper, Carbon Pigment

Leaves (set of 7 framed B&W photographs) still life leaf series
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
Seven ltd ed. archival pigment photographic prints that are each framed in museum quality contemporary ebonized walnut frames using all archival materials, depicting a single leaf. from Alysonm Belcher's Leaves series, where the artist photographs - in sill life - a single fallen leaf. Belcher is best known for her haunting and spartan still life compositions, series of nude self portraits, and nature scenes, that arise though both planning and happenstance, from primitive hand made pin-hole cameras, and hi tech digital cameras. She holds to the idea that everything we experience in life is stored somewhere in our bodies and that essence shows itself in the photograph. Condition is pristine. Alyson Belcher's photographs have been featured in International photography magazines, exhibited coast to coast...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Archival Pigment

Golden Gate Park / 0254 NEST
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
The photographs in Nest are about a primal need to create a home wherever we are. In San Francisco, there are pockets of nature where people and animals seek refuge. Belcher is attracted to wild places, particularly the caves and nests that appear in the overgrown areas of Golden Gate Park...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Naturalistic Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Archival Pigment

Remedies and Cures / Owl Drug Co
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
The artist photographed the 'Owl Drug Co 'medicine bottle (from her personal collection) in total darkness, and "painted" it with a flashlight during a 30 second exposure. The images...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Carbon Pigment

Ice Portals No. 4402 / black and white nature photography
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
Alyson Belcher's Ice Portals series of black and white photographs depict an unusually cold Northwestern winter. These photographs are records of the unique ice formations that the ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Paper, Carbon Pigment

Ice Portals No. 2573 / black and white nature photography
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
Alyson Belcher's Ice Portals series of black and white photographs depict an unusually cold Northwestern winter. These photographs are records of the unique ice formations that the ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Paper, Carbon Pigment

Golden Gate Park / 0139 NEST
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
The photographs in Nest are about a primal need to create a home wherever we are. In San Francisco, there are pockets of nature where people and animals seek refuge. Belcher is attracted to wild places, particularly the caves and nests that appear in the overgrown areas of Golden Gate Park...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Naturalistic Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Archival Pigment

Golden Gate Park / 0251 NEST
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
The photographs in Nest are about a primal need to create a home wherever we are. In San Francisco, there are pockets of nature where people and animals seek refuge. Belcher is attracted to wild places, particularly the caves and nests that appear in the overgrown areas of Golden Gate Park...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Naturalistic Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Archival Pigment

Fahey's Anodyne for Infants
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
The artist photographed the medicine bottle for her Remedies and Cures series (from her personal collection) in total darkness, and "painted" it with a flashlight during a 30 second ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Carbon Pigment

Remedies and Cures / Monkey Brand Extract
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
The artist photographed the 'Monkey Brand Extract 'medicine bottle (from her personal collection) in total darkness, and "painted" it with a flashlight during a 30 second exposure. ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Carbon Pigment

Related Items
Environmental aerial landscape color photograph: "My Land, My Landscape #9"
Located in New York, NY
32"x48" edition of 3 signed by the artist (fine art color photograph) This aerial landscape photograph depicts the sediments and water interacting at a tailing dam. The bright field ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Photographic Paper, Archival Pigment

"Marston Excelsior", 2007
By Ian Gittler
Located in Hudson, NY
Ian Gittler’s Motor Art series-photographs of century-old engine parts, gears, sparkplugs, and brand tags-offers respite from the digital fetishism, overexpo...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Archival Paper, Pigment

"Knotted Wire Brush", 2010
By Ian Gittler
Located in Hudson, NY
Ian Gittler’s Motor Art series-photographs of century-old engine parts, gears, sparkplugs, and brand tags-offers respite from the digital fetishism, overexposure and one-hundred-forty-character bursts of communication that seem to define our era. Gittler is no luddite, he loves his iPhone. But these images, often obscuring the objects beyond identification, take unsentimental pleasure in elements of weight, ground, volume and permanence that are more closely associated with a bygone heyday of industrialization. These photographs are about a tangible physical experience, about moving parts. Gittler’s expert printing-his ability to see the potential in a frame and employ the techniques necessary to articulate that vision on paper-brings the work to life. There’s wit in the brand iconography and a documentary component, but Gittler resists prescribing interpretations, saying subtext isn’t the point. His use of extremely shallow depth of field, intense contrast and exploded grain is muscular and poetic. But subtext is relevant. Although Robin Rice first approached Ian Gittler about his vector-based art on photo paper, the gallerist challenged him to create a series of photographs with that kind of machismo. As a native New Yorker who was marched through the halls of MOMA as a toddler, Gittler’s inspiration-his idea of macho-has less to do with cowboys and racecar drivers than with Franz Kline brushstrokes and modernist design. For Gittler, macho means the maximum amount of black ink that can lie across a sheet of photo paper. That kind of force. He narrowed his field of view for this series-often to a centimeter or two-in order to achieve a purely visual, visceral response. Gittler titled the work Motor Art in tribute to the 1934 Museum of Modern Art exhibit, Machine Art. Upon its sixtieth anniversary, Phillip Johnson wrote of the show (and of his own essay for its original opening), “The thrust was clear: anti-handicraft, industrial methods alone satisfied our age; Platonic dreams of perfection were the ideal.” Ian Gittler photographs, draws, writes, and makes music. He has created album covers for Willie Nelson, Roy Hargrove...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Archival Paper, Pigment

"Oil Distribution Manifold", 2007
By Ian Gittler
Located in Hudson, NY
Ian Gittler’s Motor Art series-photographs of century-old engine parts, gears, sparkplugs, and brand tags-offers respite from the digital fetishism, overexp...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Archival Paper, Pigment

"Gas & Gasoline", 2007
By Ian Gittler
Located in Hudson, NY
Ian Gittler’s Motor Art series-photographs of century-old engine parts, gears, sparkplugs, and brand tags-offers respite from the digital fetishism, overexpo...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Archival Paper, Pigment

"Cummins Steam Pump", 2007
By Ian Gittler
Located in Hudson, NY
Ian Gittler’s Motor Art series-photographs of century-old engine parts, gears, sparkplugs, and brand tags-offers respite from the digital fetishism, overexposure and one-hundred-forty-character bursts of communication that seem to define our era. Gittler is no luddite, he loves his iPhone. But these images, often obscuring the objects beyond identification, take unsentimental pleasure in elements of weight, ground, volume and permanence that are more closely associated with a bygone heyday of industrialization. These photographs are about a tangible physical experience, about moving parts. Gittler’s expert printing-his ability to see the potential in a frame and employ the techniques necessary to articulate that vision on paper-brings the work to life. There’s wit in the brand iconography and a documentary component, but Gittler resists prescribing interpretations, saying subtext isn’t the point. His use of extremely shallow depth of field, intense contrast and exploded grain is muscular and poetic. But subtext is relevant. Although Robin Rice first approached Ian Gittler about his vector-based art on photo paper, the gallerist challenged him to create a series of photographs with that kind of machismo. As a native New Yorker who was marched through the halls of MOMA as a toddler, Gittler’s inspiration-his idea of macho-has less to do with cowboys and racecar drivers than with Franz Kline brushstrokes and modernist design. For Gittler, macho means the maximum amount of black ink that can lie across a sheet of photo paper. That kind of force. He narrowed his field of view for this series-often to a centimeter or two-in order to achieve a purely visual, visceral response. Gittler titled the work Motor Art in tribute to the 1934 Museum of Modern Art exhibit, Machine Art. Upon its sixtieth anniversary, Phillip Johnson wrote of the show (and of his own essay for its original opening), “The thrust was clear: anti-handicraft, industrial methods alone satisfied our age; Platonic dreams of perfection were the ideal.” Ian Gittler photographs, draws, writes, and makes music. He has created album covers for Willie Nelson, Roy Hargrove...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Archival Paper, Pigment

"Speed Lever", 2010
By Ian Gittler
Located in Hudson, NY
Ian Gittler’s Motor Art series-photographs of century-old engine parts, gears, sparkplugs, and brand tags-offers respite from the digital fetishism, overexposure and one-hundred-forty-character bursts of communication that seem to define our era. Gittler is no luddite, he loves his iPhone. But these images, often obscuring the objects beyond identification, take unsentimental pleasure in elements of weight, ground, volume and permanence that are more closely associated with a bygone heyday of industrialization. These photographs are about a tangible physical experience, about moving parts. Gittler’s expert printing-his ability to see the potential in a frame and employ the techniques necessary to articulate that vision on paper-brings the work to life. There’s wit in the brand iconography and a documentary component, but Gittler resists prescribing interpretations, saying subtext isn’t the point. His use of extremely shallow depth of field, intense contrast and exploded grain is muscular and poetic. But subtext is relevant. Although Robin Rice first approached Ian Gittler about his vector-based art on photo paper, the gallerist challenged him to create a series of photographs with that kind of machismo. As a native New Yorker who was marched through the halls of MOMA as a toddler, Gittler’s inspiration-his idea of macho-has less to do with cowboys and racecar drivers than with Franz Kline brushstrokes and modernist design. For Gittler, macho means the maximum amount of black ink that can lie across a sheet of photo paper. That kind of force. He narrowed his field of view for this series-often to a centimeter or two-in order to achieve a purely visual, visceral response. Gittler titled the work Motor Art in tribute to the 1934 Museum of Modern Art exhibit, Machine Art. Upon its sixtieth anniversary, Phillip Johnson wrote of the show (and of his own essay for its original opening), “The thrust was clear: anti-handicraft, industrial methods alone satisfied our age; Platonic dreams of perfection were the ideal.” Ian Gittler photographs, draws, writes, and makes music. He has created album covers for Willie Nelson, Roy Hargrove...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Archival Paper, Pigment

"Trip Hammer", 2010
By Ian Gittler
Located in Hudson, NY
Ian Gittler’s Motor Art series-photographs of century-old engine parts, gears, sparkplugs, and brand tags-offers respite from the digital fetishism, overexposure and one-hundred-forty-character bursts of communication that seem to define our era. Gittler is no luddite, he loves his iPhone. But these images, often obscuring the objects beyond identification, take unsentimental pleasure in elements of weight, ground, volume and permanence that are more closely associated with a bygone heyday of industrialization. These photographs are about a tangible physical experience, about moving parts. Gittler’s expert printing-his ability to see the potential in a frame and employ the techniques necessary to articulate that vision on paper-brings the work to life. There’s wit in the brand iconography and a documentary component, but Gittler resists prescribing interpretations, saying subtext isn’t the point. His use of extremely shallow depth of field, intense contrast and exploded grain is muscular and poetic. But subtext is relevant. Although Robin Rice first approached Ian Gittler about his vector-based art on photo paper, the gallerist challenged him to create a series of photographs with that kind of machismo. As a native New Yorker who was marched through the halls of MOMA as a toddler, Gittler’s inspiration-his idea of macho-has less to do with cowboys and racecar drivers than with Franz Kline brushstrokes and modernist design. For Gittler, macho means the maximum amount of black ink that can lie across a sheet of photo paper. That kind of force. He narrowed his field of view for this series-often to a centimeter or two-in order to achieve a purely visual, visceral response. Gittler titled the work Motor Art in tribute to the 1934 Museum of Modern Art exhibit, Machine Art. Upon its sixtieth anniversary, Phillip Johnson wrote of the show (and of his own essay for its original opening), “The thrust was clear: anti-handicraft, industrial methods alone satisfied our age; Platonic dreams of perfection were the ideal.” Ian Gittler photographs, draws, writes, and makes music. He has created album covers for Willie Nelson, Roy Hargrove...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Archival Paper, Pigment

"Cutting Dies", 2010
By Ian Gittler
Located in Hudson, NY
Ian Gittler’s Motor Art series-photographs of century-old engine parts, gears, sparkplugs, and brand tags-offers respite from the digital fetishism, overexposure and one-hundred-forty-character bursts of communication that seem to define our era. Gittler is no luddite, he loves his iPhone. But these images, often obscuring the objects beyond identification, take unsentimental pleasure in elements of weight, ground, volume and permanence that are more closely associated with a bygone heyday of industrialization. These photographs are about a tangible physical experience, about moving parts. Gittler’s expert printing-his ability to see the potential in a frame and employ the techniques necessary to articulate that vision on paper-brings the work to life. There’s wit in the brand iconography and a documentary component, but Gittler resists prescribing interpretations, saying subtext isn’t the point. His use of extremely shallow depth of field, intense contrast and exploded grain is muscular and poetic. But subtext is relevant. Although Robin Rice first approached Ian Gittler about his vector-based art on photo paper, the gallerist challenged him to create a series of photographs with that kind of machismo. As a native New Yorker who was marched through the halls of MOMA as a toddler, Gittler’s inspiration-his idea of macho-has less to do with cowboys and racecar drivers than with Franz Kline brushstrokes and modernist design. For Gittler, macho means the maximum amount of black ink that can lie across a sheet of photo paper. That kind of force. He narrowed his field of view for this series-often to a centimeter or two-in order to achieve a purely visual, visceral response. Gittler titled the work Motor Art in tribute to the 1934 Museum of Modern Art exhibit, Machine Art. Upon its sixtieth anniversary, Phillip Johnson wrote of the show (and of his own essay for its original opening), “The thrust was clear: anti-handicraft, industrial methods alone satisfied our age; Platonic dreams of perfection were the ideal.” Ian Gittler photographs, draws, writes, and makes music. He has created album covers for Willie Nelson, Roy Hargrove...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Archival Paper, Pigment

"Solex Carburetor 1928", 2007
By Ian Gittler
Located in Hudson, NY
Ian Gittler’s Motor Art series-photographs of century-old engine parts, gears, sparkplugs, and brand tags-offers respite from the digital fetishism, overexposure and one-hundred-forty-character bursts of communication that seem to define our era. Gittler is no luddite, he loves his iPhone. But these images, often obscuring the objects beyond identification, take unsentimental pleasure in elements of weight, ground, volume and permanence that are more closely associated with a bygone heyday of industrialization. These photographs are about a tangible physical experience, about moving parts. Gittler’s expert printing-his ability to see the potential in a frame and employ the techniques necessary to articulate that vision on paper-brings the work to life. There’s wit in the brand iconography and a documentary component, but Gittler resists prescribing interpretations, saying subtext isn’t the point. His use of extremely shallow depth of field, intense contrast and exploded grain is muscular and poetic. But subtext is relevant. Although Robin Rice first approached Ian Gittler about his vector-based art on photo paper, the gallerist challenged him to create a series of photographs with that kind of machismo. As a native New Yorker who was marched through the halls of MOMA as a toddler, Gittler’s inspiration-his idea of macho-has less to do with cowboys and racecar drivers than with Franz Kline brushstrokes and modernist design. For Gittler, macho means the maximum amount of black ink that can lie across a sheet of photo paper. That kind of force. He narrowed his field of view for this series-often to a centimeter or two-in order to achieve a purely visual, visceral response. Gittler titled the work Motor Art in tribute to the 1934 Museum of Modern Art exhibit, Machine Art. Upon its sixtieth anniversary, Phillip Johnson wrote of the show (and of his own essay for its original opening), “The thrust was clear: anti-handicraft, industrial methods alone satisfied our age; Platonic dreams of perfection were the ideal.” Ian Gittler photographs, draws, writes, and makes music. He has created album covers for Willie Nelson, Roy Hargrove...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Archival Paper, Pigment

"Ideal", 2007
By Ian Gittler
Located in Hudson, NY
“IDEAL" features a 1.5 horsepower lawnmower engine manufactured in 1924 that still works. And the brand name-Ideal-speaks to an attitude about fabrication and manufacture linking pri...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Archival Paper, Pigment

"Ideal", 2007
$1,250
H 16 in W 20 in
"Mianus Motor Works", 2007
By Ian Gittler
Located in Hudson, NY
Ian Gittler’s Motor Art series-photographs of century-old engine parts, gears, sparkplugs, and brand tags-offers respite from the digital fetishism, overexp...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Archival Paper, Pigment

Previously Available Items
Ice Portals No. 4244 / black and white nature photography
By Alyson Belcher
Located in Burlingame, CA
Alyson Belcher's Ice Portals series of black and white photographs depict an unusually cold Northwestern winter. These photographs are records of the unique ice formations that the ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Alyson Belcher Art

Materials

Paper, Carbon Pigment

Alyson Belcher art for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Alyson Belcher art available for sale on 1stDibs. You can also browse by medium to find art by Alyson Belcher in pigment print, carbon pigment print, archival pigment print and more. Much of the original work by this artist or collective was created during the 21st century and contemporary and is mostly associated with the contemporary style. Not every interior allows for large Alyson Belcher art, so small editions measuring 10 inches across are available. Customers who are interested in this artist might also find the work of Tony Argento, Stu Levy, and Lependorf and Shire. Alyson Belcher art prices can differ depending upon medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $1,150 and tops out at $5,000, while the average work can sell for $1,200.

Artists Similar to Alyson Belcher

Recently Viewed

View All