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Artist: Courty
You don't have to be Rich to be my Girl-Street Art, Urban, Graffiti, colour pop
By Courty
Located in London, GB
Born  Robert  Keith  Court  on  November  2nd  1970  in  the  market  town of Romford,  Essex,  England  to  a  working  class  family.  Courty,  is  his childhood  nickname  adopted  for  signature  reference  to  his  collection of signed neon artworks. Since  1987  Courty  has  dedicated  his  life  to  the  study  of  neon  lights and  immersed  his  mind  in  creating  beautiful  works  of  art  with  the  use of  vibrant  colours,  lighting  technology,  typography  and  the  written word,  predominantly  with  the  use  of  the  iconic  light  form  known  as 'Neon'. A  respected  and  well  known  English  craftsmen  of  the  100  year old  art  of  glassblowing  neon  tube  lights,  Courty  has  reached  master neon  glass  blower  level  and  is  forever  exploring  and  pushing  the boundaries  of  hand  made  neon  light  use  in  the  world  of  art  & sculpture from his East London based studio. Not  a  classically  trained  artist,  Courty  has  chosen  to  work  from industry  ground  level  and  has  spent  a  lifetime  working  hands  on  with creative  minds  from  around  the  world  in  the  art  &  design  arena, turning  ideas  and  visions  into  'illumination  reality'  on  a  spectacular level.  This  has  earned  him  the  reputation  of  being  'the  man  to  go  to' for  high  end  neon  fabrication.  Being  company  owner  of  commercial illumination  specialists  'Signs  Of  All  Kinds'  and  art  world  specialists 'Creative  Neon',  Courty  is  in  a  unique  position  to  produce  high  quality neon  art  that  combines  his  own  personal  creativity  with  his  knowledge and  technical  expertise  that  culminates  in  a  beautifully  crafted  light  art piece...
Category

2010s Contemporary Courty Mixed Media

Materials

Glitter, Board

Come With Me - Street Art, Urban, Graffiti, colour pop
By Courty
Located in London, GB
Born  Robert  Keith  Court  on  November  2nd  1970  in  the  market  town of Romford,  Essex,  England  to  a  working  class  family.  Courty,  is  his childhood  nickname  adopted  for  signature  reference  to  his  collection of signed neon artworks. Since  1987  Courty  has  dedicated  his  life  to  the  study  of  neon  lights and  immersed  his  mind  in  creating  beautiful  works  of  art  with  the  use of  vibrant  colours,  lighting  technology,  typography  and  the  written word,  predominantly  with  the  use  of  the  iconic  light  form  known  as 'Neon'. A  respected  and  well  known  English  craftsmen  of  the  100  year old  art  of  glassblowing  neon  tube  lights,  Courty  has  reached  master neon  glass  blower  level  and  is  forever  exploring  and  pushing  the boundaries  of  hand  made  neon  light  use  in  the  world  of  art  & sculpture from his East London based studio. Not  a  classically  trained  artist,  Courty  has  chosen  to  work  from industry  ground  level  and  has  spent  a  lifetime  working  hands  on  with creative  minds  from  around  the  world  in  the  art  &  design  arena, turning  ideas  and  visions  into  'illumination  reality'  on  a  spectacular level.  This  has  earned  him  the  reputation  of  being  'the  man  to  go  to' for  high  end  neon  fabrication.  Being  company  owner  of  commercial illumination  specialists  'Signs  Of  All  Kinds'  and  art  world  specialists 'Creative  Neon',  Courty  is  in  a  unique  position  to  produce  high  quality neon  art  that  combines  his  own  personal  creativity  with  his  knowledge and  technical  expertise  that  culminates  in  a  beautifully  crafted  light  art piece...
Category

2010s Contemporary Courty Mixed Media

Materials

Glitter, Board

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Lasanky taught his students to use several different printing techniques in their work and to study the masters' work in order to find solutions to technical problems. At the State University of Iowa she met the artist Paul Brach, whom she married in 1946.. By 1951 they moved to New York City and befriended many of the Abstract expressionist artists of the New York School, including Joan Mitchell, Larry Rivers, Knox Martin and Michael Goldberg. Schapiro worked in the style of Abstract expressionism during this time period. Shapiro and Brach lived in New York City during the 1950s and 1960s. During this period Shapiro had a successful career as an abstract expressionist painter in the hard-edge style. In December 1957, André Emmerich selected one of her paintings for the opening of his gallery. Schapiro not only honored the craft tradition in women's art, but also paid homage to women artists of the past. In the early 1970s she made paintings and collages which included photo reproductions of Mary Cassatt's and Georgia O'keefe's paintings. Early in her career, Schapiro started looking for maternal symbols to unify her own roles as a woman. Her series, Shrines (1963), was her first artistically successful attempt at compartmentalizing her life roles. Her painting, Big Ox No. 1, from 1968, references Shrines, however no longer compartmentalized. The center O takes on the symbol of the egg which exists as the window into the maternal structure with outstretched limbs. Her series, Shrines was created in 1961–63. It is one of her earliest group of work that was also an autobiography. Each section of the work show an aspect of being a woman artist. They are also symbolic of her body and soul. In 1964 Schapiro and her husband Paul both worked at the Tamarind Lithography Workshop. One of Schapiro's biggest turning points in her art career was working at the workshop and experimenting with Josef Albers' Color-Aid paper, where she began making several new shrines and created her first collages. In the 1970s, Schapiro and Brach moved to California so that both could teach in the art department at the University of California. Subsequently, she was able to establish the Feminist Art Program at the California Institute of the Arts, in Valencia with Judy Chicago. The program set out to address the problems in the arts from an institutional position. They wanted the creation of art to be less of a private, introspective adventure and more of a public process through consciousness raising sessions, personal confessions and technical training. She participated in the Womanhouse exhibition in 1972. Schapiro's smaller piece within Womanhouse, called "Dollhouse", was constructed using various scrap pieces to create all the furniture and accessories in the house. Each room signified a particular role a woman plays in society and depicted the conflicts between them. Along with Nancy Spero, Joan Snyder, Joyce Kozloff, Audrey Flack and Judy Chicago, she is from that first generation of Jewish American feminist women artists and includes Judaica in her work. Schapiro's work from the 1970s onwards consists primarily of collages assembled from fabrics, which she called "femmages". As Schapiro traveled the United States giving lectures, she would ask the women she met for a souvenir. These souvenirs would be used in her collage like paintings. Her 1977-1978 essay Waste Not Want Not: An Inquiry into What Women Saved and Assembled - FEMMAGE (written with Melissa Meyer) describes femmage as the activities of collage, assemblage, découpage and photomontage practised by women using "traditional women's techniques - sewing, piercing, hooking, cutting, appliquéing, cooking and the like..." She was involved in Abstract expressionism, Minimalism, Computer art, and Feminist art. She worked with collage, printmaking, painting, femmage [fr] – using women's craft in her artwork, and sculpture. Schapiro not only honored the craft tradition in women's art, but also paid homage to women artists of the past. In the early 1970s she made paintings and collages which included photo reproductions of past artists such as Mary Cassatt. In the mid 1980s she painted portraits of Frida Kahlo on top of her old self-portrait paintings. In the 1990s Schapiro began to include women of the Russian Avant Garde in her work. The Russian Avant Garde was an important moment in Modern Art history for Schapiro to reflect on because women were seen as equals. Schapiro also did collaborative art projects, like her series of etchings Anonymous was a Woman from 1977. She was able to produce the series with a group of nine women studio-art graduates from the University of Oregon. Each print is an impression made from an untransformed doily that was placed in soft ground on a zinc plate, then etched and printed. Her image is included in the iconic 1972 poster Some Living American Women Artists by Mary Beth Edelson...
Category

Early 2000s Contemporary Courty Mixed Media

Materials

Glitter, Mixed Media, Fabric, Acrylic, Digital

Courty mixed media for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Courty mixed media available for sale on 1stDibs. You can also browse by medium to find art by Courty in board, glitter 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 Courty mixed media, so small editions measuring 54 inches across are available. Customers who are interested in this artist might also find the work of Ant Pearce, Brad Waters, and John Butterworth. Courty mixed media prices can differ depending upon medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $1,365 and tops out at $1,365, while the average work can sell for $1,365.

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