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Rare Catherine Koenig Nude Female Artist American Trompe L'oeil Pastel Pink
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
A Modern realist “trompe l’oeil” egg tempera painting by American female artist Catherine Catanzaro Koenig depicting a painting of a nude held up by masking tape. Koenig inspired by Magritte, creates captivating works that delight the eye. Catherine C. Koenig was born Caterina Catanzaro in 1921 and grew up on the West side of Buffalo, NY. She graduated from Lafayette High School Buffalo in 1939. She exhibited a talent for drawing and painting early on and attended Albright Art School, where she graduated with an Associate's Degree in 1942. Her professional career as an artist began in the 1940s when she started to exhibit her work. From 1946-1956, she taught drawing and painting at the Art Institute of Buffalo. She married Buffalo artist...
Category

1980s Realist Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Wood, Tempera, Egg Tempera, Board

Prayer Rug 1
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
A Modern realist “trompe l’oeil” egg tempera painting by American female artist Catherine Catanzaro Koenig depicting a person curled up titled “Prayer Rug #1″. Catherine C. Koenig was born Caterina Catanzaro in 1921 and grew up on the West side of Buffalo, NY. She graduated from Lafayette High School Buffalo in 1939. She exhibited a talent for drawing and painting early on and attended Albright Art School, where she graduated with an Associate's Degree in 1942. Her professional career as an artist began in the 1940s when she started to exhibit her work. From 1946-1956, she taught drawing and painting at the Art Institute of Buffalo. She married Buffalo artist...
Category

1980s Realist Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Board, Egg Tempera, Tempera, Wood

Prayer Rug 2
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
A Modern realist “trompe l’oeil” egg tempera painting by American female artist Catherine Catanzaro Koenig depicting a person curled up titled “Prayer Rug #2″. Catherine C. Koenig was born Caterina Catanzaro in 1921 and grew up on the West side of Buffalo, NY. She graduated from Lafayette High School Buffalo in 1939. She exhibited a talent for drawing and painting early on and attended Albright Art School, where she graduated with an Associate's Degree in 1942. Her professional career as an artist began in the 1940s when she started to exhibit her work. From 1946-1956, she taught drawing and painting at the Art Institute of Buffalo. She married Buffalo artist...
Category

1980s Realist Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Board, Egg Tempera, Tempera, Wood

Art Institute
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original 1942 oil on board painting by American female artist Catherine Koenig depicting the interior of the Buffalo Art Institute which was home to the legendary Charles Burchfie...
Category

1940s American Modern Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Oil Crayon

Rainbow
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original realist drawing by American female artist Catherine Koenig. This work is featured in the Draw Near exhibition currently on view at Benjaman Gallery.
Category

1980s Realist Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Pastel, Archival Paper

Mexico
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original realist egg tempera painting by American artist Catherine Koenig created during her travels to Mexico. This work will be featured in the gallery's upcoming exhibition "Dr...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Realist Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Board, Egg Tempera

Eggplant Etc.
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original tempera painting by American female artist Catherine Koenig. This work is currently featured in the Draw Near exhibition at Benjaman Gallery.
Category

1970s Realist Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Board, Egg Tempera

Cross Up
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original realist pastel drawing by American female artist Catherine Koenig.
Category

1990s Realist Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Archival Paper, Oil Pastel

Taped Sky
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original watercolor painting by American artist Catherine Koenig.
Category

1980s Realist Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Archival Paper, Watercolor

Rug and Hat
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original acrylic on panel by American female artist Catherine Koenig. This stunning work created in 1980 is part of the Draw Near exhibition on view at Benjaman Gallery
Category

1980s American Realist Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Acrylic, Panel

San Miguel
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original realist egg tempera painting by American artist Catherine Koenig created during her travels to Mexico. This work will be featured in the gallery's upcoming exhibition "D...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Realist Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Board, Egg Tempera

DeChirico Study
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original oil on panel by American female artist Catherine Koenig created in 1941.
Category

1940s Modern Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Oil, Panel

Parade
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original egg tempera painting by American female artist Catherine Koenig.
Category

1950s Modern Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Board, Egg Tempera

Glass Catcher
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original realist egg tempera painting by American female artist Catherine Koenig titled "Glass Catcher". This work created in 2001 is part of Draw Ne...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Realist Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Board, Egg Tempera

Lake Scape
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original realist egg tempera painting by American artist Catherine Koenig.
Category

1990s Realist Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Egg Tempera

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The Demogogue
Located in Los Angeles, CA
The Demagogue or Tale in a Tub, 1952, oil on canvas, 20 x 24 inches, signed, titled, and dated verso About the Painting The Demagogue is an iconic Bendor Mark painting from the prime of his post-war period. Beginning early in his career, Mark was fascinated with depictions of the human figure and their capacity to tell stories of the world around him. Mark was a keen observer of his times and in The Demagogue we see Mark’s portrayal of a faithless politician holding up a “V” for victory sign as he appeals to the wanton desires and prejudices of the masses. Below the demagogue is a swirl of humanity representing the common man who is being pushed down by the powerful, while the robed figure of liberty with her scales of justice held high is brushed aside. Behind the demagogue, Mark places two other powerful supporting institutions which were often co-opted by the world’s dictators, the Church and the Military. 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Like Mark’s work in the collection of the Whitney Museum of American Art (The Hourglass - 1950-51) and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (Execution – 1940), The Demagogue pulls no punches, as the artist lays bare the threats to freedom and basic human rights. About the Artist Bendor Mark was an American modernist and social realist painter. Born as Bernard Marcus on June 5, 1912, in Brooklyn, New York, Mark trained at The Cooper Union during the 1920s where he studied with William Brantley van Ingen and became a prize-winning artist with a focus on painting the human figure. After his time at Cooper, Mark continued to live in New York and worked as a commercial artist and textile designer in addition to his pursuit of a career in painting. Like many Depression Era artists, Mark engaged with social progressives and in 1934, he joined the Artist’s Union which had the goal of advancing artists’ position as “worker.” Mark’s painting, Restaurant, which is now in the permanent collection of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, appeared in the February 1936 edition of the Union’s publication, Art Front, as part of a review of an exhibition at ACA Gallery in New York. Mark worked on the Federal Art Project and by the mid- to late-1930s, began a series of paintings exploring the working conditions and hazards of the mining industry. Mark believed that miners were “in the forefront of the struggle for emancipation” and that the mere “struggle for existence is like moving mountains.” He became passionate about the Spanish Civil War and painted sympathetic images in support of the Spanish Republic. Mark was a premature anti-fascist and throughout his career painted works critical of dictators and other oppressors. During the late 1930s, Mark entered mural competitions with designs influenced by the Mexican muralists, taught adult art education in Queens, New York, and was an instructor at the WPA’s Queensboro Art Center. He was so committed to socially progressive art that by 1934, he had changed his name to Bendor Mark, in part, to distinguish his social realist paintings from his earlier work. During World War II, Mark worked as an artist for military contractors. After the war, he was employed as a graphic artist and in the printing industry before moving to Southern California in 1948, where he returned to a fine art practice the following year with politically and socially charged images which reflected his view of the shortcomings of the post-War period, the continued threat of fascism, and the international tensions of the Cold War. As the mood of the country shifted towards the right during the McCarthy Era and the art world’s attention focused on abstraction at the expense of figuration, Mark’s career as a painter suffered. From the 1950s through the 1980s, Mark continued to depict the events that shaped the world around him, often employing a highly stylized approach characterized by dynamic multi-figure compositions, a subtle muted palette, and exaggerated expressive features. A review of Mark’s oeuvre suggests that few people escaped Mark’s attention. He painted presidents, prime ministers, royalty, evangelists, musicians, and dictators (and their henchman), along with miners, farm workers, the urban poor, protesters, the unemployed and dispossessed. He laid bare the arrogance, cruelty, and hypocrisy of the world’s elites. Mark noted, “A work of art cannot be fully appreciated or wholly understood without considering the socio-political and cultural ambience that gave it birth.” He continued, “I have the ability to foresee the direction of social and political events while they are actually taking place.” He was not himself a direct political activist, however. Although Mark commented, “It’s a misconception to separate art from the social aspect of life,” he viewed artists as being neutral. According to Mark, “An apolitical attitude reflects the fact that the artist is passive. . . An artist never affects society; he merely reflects it.” In addition to the Mexican Muralists, Mark was influenced by the old masters Rembrandt, Michelangelo, and Masaccio, as well as the more modern master, Van Gogh. Mark’s writings directly acknowledge these influences and archival material from his estate includes magazine articles, pamphlets and transparencies related to these artists. Mark also collected materials related to several of his social realist contemporaries, including Reginald Marsh, Ben Shahn, Leonard Baskin, and Raphael Soyer, who was Mark’s good friend. For years, Soyer sent Mark holiday cards and Soyer inscribed a message of friendship on a self-portrait he gifted to Mark in the 1970s, all of which are still held in the collection of Mark’s family. From the late 1920s through the mid-1950s, Mark’s work was well received. His paintings won prizes and were accepted into major juried exhibitions including at the Brooklyn Museum, the New York World’s Fair and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. He gained national recognition for paintings depicting the oppressed and the common worker. Despite the decline in popularity of representational art during the 1950s and 1960s, Mark stayed true to his interest in depicting the human figure and by the last two decades of his life, his work underwent a reassessment as curators included Mark’s paintings in exhibitions showcasing the role of labor in art during the Depression Era. This recognition continued in recent years when Mark was honored by having his work included in the Whitney Museum of American Art’s ground-breaking exhibition, Vida Americana, which explored the pioneering role that the Mexican muralists played in the development of modern American art during the inter-war period. The influence of Rivera, Siqueiros and Orozco on Mark is unmistakable and his paintings from the 1950s (and beyond) sit comfortably in dialogue with other Los Angeles artists who continued to paint in the social realist tradition long after the mainstream art world had moved toward abstraction. 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Mid-20th Century American Modern Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Canvas, Oil

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H 24 in W 20 in D 2 in
"1940 - New Mexico Farmers" Orig. Mixed Media on Board by Tom Perkinson, Framed
By Tom Perkinson
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"1940 - New Mexico Farmers" is an original mixed media on board by Tom Perkinson. His use of saturated violets, vivid yellows, and resplendent oranges pushes color to almost-otherwor...
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1970s Realist Catherine Koenig Art

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Jardin d'été, Original Drawing, Pastel, Summer Garden, Pool
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21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Catherine Koenig Art

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Previously Available Items
Figure Study
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original modern realist oil painting by American female artist Catherine Koenig. This work, created in 1942 is currently featured in the Draw Near exhibition at Benjaman Gallery.
Category

1940s Modern Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Board, Oil

Shells with Mat
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
An original realist trompe l'oiel pastel drawing by American artist Catherine Koenig. This work will be featured in the upcoming exhibition "Draw Near" which will run from March 11 ...
Category

1980s Realist Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Pastel, Paper

Eggshells
By Catherine Koenig
Located in Buffalo, NY
A Modern realist “trompe l’oeil” egg tempera painting by American female artist Catherine Catanzaro Koenig. Catherine C. Koenig was born Caterina Catanzaro in 1921 and grew up on ...
Category

1980s Realist Catherine Koenig Art

Materials

Archival Paper, Egg Tempera

Catherine Koenig art for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Catherine Koenig art available for sale on 1stDibs. If you’re browsing the collection of art to introduce a pop of color in a neutral corner of your living room or bedroom, you can find work that includes elements of orange and other colors. You can also browse by medium to find art by Catherine Koenig in paint, egg tempera, tempera and more. Much of the original work by this artist or collective was created during the 20th century and is mostly associated with the modern style. Not every interior allows for large Catherine Koenig art, so small editions measuring 11 inches across are available. Customers who are interested in this artist might also find the work of Tom Perkinson, Marie Channer, and Harry Brioche. Catherine Koenig art prices can differ depending upon medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $800 and tops out at $7,000, while the average work can sell for $2,500.

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