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1924 original poster Le temps est de l'argent, les ailes font gagner du temps
1924 original poster Le temps est de l'argent, les ailes font gagner du temps

1924 original poster Le temps est de l'argent, les ailes font gagner du temps

By Georges Villa

Located in PARIS, FR

In the early 20th century, aviation emerged as a symbol of progress and adventure, capturing the imagination of a world on the brink of technological revolution. Among the pioneers w...

Category

1920s Georges Villa Art

Materials

Linen, Paper, Lithograph

1921 original poster by Georges Villa : Avion dans les nuages
1921 original poster by Georges Villa : Avion dans les nuages

1921 original poster by Georges Villa : Avion dans les nuages

By Georges Villa

Located in PARIS, FR

In 1921, French artist Georges Villa created a remarkable poster that captured the spirit of early aviation and the pioneering visionaries who shaped the skies. Known for his keen ar...

Category

1920s Georges Villa Art

Materials

Paper, Lithograph

1928 Original poster by Georges Villa Official Exhibition of the Paris Air Show
1928 Original poster by Georges Villa Official Exhibition of the Paris Air Show

1928 Original poster by Georges Villa Official Exhibition of the Paris Air Show

By Georges Villa

Located in PARIS, FR

Original poster by Georges Villa commissioned by the French Committee for Aeronautical Propaganda. For aviation - 20 years later More skeptics Joseph Prudhomme... My son is running to take the plane! With a superb picture of a man wearing a hat and an overflowing bag, with a telescope and an umbrella, running towards an air...

Category

1920s Georges Villa Art

Materials

Paper, Lithograph

1926 original poster project in gouache by Georges Villa Salon de l'Aviation
1926 original poster project in gouache by Georges Villa Salon de l'Aviation

1926 original poster project in gouache by Georges Villa Salon de l'Aviation

By Georges Villa

Located in PARIS, FR

This vibrant and rare 1926 poster project, created in gouache and watercolor by renowned illustrator Georges Villa, was conceived as a proposed design for the 10th Salon de l’Aviatio...

Category

1920s Georges Villa Art

Materials

Paper, Watercolor, Gouache

Aviation Populaire by Georges Villa 1936 Original Poster - Art Deco
Aviation Populaire by Georges Villa 1936 Original Poster - Art Deco

Aviation Populaire by Georges Villa 1936 Original Poster - Art Deco

By Georges Villa

Located in PARIS, FR

It's a bird! It's a plane! It's a... very large teenage boy appearing out of the clouds? Villa created this powerful image to encourage young people to practice light aviation—an ini...

Category

1930s Art Deco Georges Villa Art

Materials

Linen, Paper, Lithograph

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"Three Ribbon Heads", Art Deco Hand Colored Lithograph by John Luke Eastman 1984
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"Three Ribbon Heads", Art Deco Hand Colored Lithograph by John Luke Eastman 1984

Located in Soquel, CA

"Three Ribbon Heads", Art Deco Female Figurative by John Luke Eastman. 1984 Beautiful mid-1980's hand colored Art Deco style lithograph by Southern California artist John Luke Eastman (American, b.1929). In this 1984 version of Eastman's "Three Ribbon Heads", a delicate flowing line drawing of three consecutive women's faces in profile are framed by ribbons in a circular composition. As in many of the artist's works, Eastman captions the piece with the following phrase: " In this life we have three lasting qualities...faith, hope, and love. But the greatest of them is love." Hand signed and dated in pencil lower right, "John L. Eastman 84" artists proof. Displayed in a light grey mat and new art deco-style giltwood frame. Paper size: 20"H x 16"W. Framed size: 19.5"H x 23.25"W x 1"D. John Luke Eastman is a Southern California artist with a unique style. A graduate of UCLA with a degree in graphic arts, he was successful fashion illustrator and art director for prestigious department store in L. A. before turning his full attention to fine art. Over the part decade he has created and mastered the unique style that is currently found in his limited edition silk-screen graphics. A versatile artist, who has illustrated many record and book covers he refers to his style as "the 5th dimension" or "beautiful distortion". The qualities he seeks to impart through his works are fluidity of movement, a feeling of spatiality, weightlessness and beautiful color. His artworks have been in a lot of shows across the country. He recently had show at Celux (Louis Vuitton membership...

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Umberto Brunelleschi, Untitled, from The Tales of Boccaccio, 1934 (after)
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Umberto Brunelleschi, Untitled, from The Tales of Boccaccio, 1934 (after)

By Umberto Brunelleschi

Located in Southampton, NY

This exquisite lithograph and pochoir after Umberto Brunelleschi (1879–1949), titled Sans titre (Untitled), originates from the celebrated album Les contes de Boccace (The Tales of B...

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1930s Art Deco Georges Villa Art

Materials

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Colorful Tablescape Still-Life of Bottles & Fruit. Gouache, Pastel. 54cm x 72cm.
Colorful Tablescape Still-Life of Bottles & Fruit. Gouache, Pastel. 54cm x 72cm.

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Located in Cotignac, FR

1970s tablescape still-life of bottles and fruit in pastel and gouache on paper by Belgian artist André Pierard. Not signed but acquired along with a collection of work from the arti...

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'M', Hockney's Alphabet, David Hockney and Stephen Spender, Lithograph, 1991
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'M', Hockney's Alphabet, David Hockney and Stephen Spender, Lithograph, 1991

By David Hockney

Located in Manchester, GB

David Hockney, 'M' from 'Hockney's Alphabet', 1991 Edition of 250 From the special edition of Hockney's Alphabet, published in 1991, and signed on the justification page by the art...

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By Richard Roth

Located in Spokane, WA

An original vintage poster of Perlach Macaroni Spaghetti created by Richard Roth for the German pasta brand, Perlach in the 1940s 1. The poster features an anthropomorphic pasta man...

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1940s Art Deco Georges Villa Art

Materials

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Charmion von Wiegand - Pillar of Zen #124, signed painting Andre Zarre Gallery
Charmion von Wiegand - Pillar of Zen #124, signed painting Andre Zarre Gallery

Charmion von Wiegand - Pillar of Zen #124, signed painting Andre Zarre Gallery

By Charmion von Wiegand

Located in New York, NY

Charmion von Wiegand Pillar of Zen #124, 1959 Gouache on paper painting Hand signed, titled and dated on the front Unique Provenance: Andre Zarre Gallery, with label verso (Estate of renowned gallerist Andre Zarre, ne Andre Sowulewski) Measurements: Framed 26.5 inches vertical by 25.5 horizontal by 2 inches Artwork: 21 inches vertical by 22 inches horizontal Mid century modern, geometric, spiritual abstraction, mystical The Estate of the celebrated artist Charmion Von Wiegand has been represented exclusively by Michael Rosenfeld Gallery since 1998. From March 3 to August 13, 2023, Charmion Von Wiegand was the subject of an acclaimed retrospective at the Kunstmuseum Basel, and she has received major attention in the price, including a June, 2023 ArtNews feature entitled, "Who Was Charmion von Wiegand and Why Is She Important?". Her work was also featured in a solo presentation by Rosenfeld Gallery at the New York Art Show held at the Park Avenue Armory, which also received critical acclaim. Artists Biography - courtesy of Michael Rosenfeld Gallery: Known for her vibrant, geometric paintings that originate a deeply personal language of spiritual enlightenment expressed through a constructivist mode of abstraction, Charmion von Wiegand (1896–1983) was born in Chicago but spent much of her childhood traveling. The daughter of a journalist for Hearst, von Wiegand eventually settled in New York in 1915 to attend Barnard College and Columbia University, where she took classes at the School of Journalism while nurturing a growing interest in art history. In 1925, von Wiegand realized that she wanted to be an artist and set up a studio in Greenwich Village, teaching herself how to paint while pursuing a career as a journalist. In 1929, she secured a position in Moscow as a foreign correspondent for Hearst, the only woman at the desk at the time. In 1932, von Wiegand returned to New York and married Russian émigré Joseph Freeman, who co-founded and edited the leftist journal New Masses. Von Wiegand began writing art criticism for New Masses as well as for other publications, including New Theatre, ARTnews, and Arts Magazine. When the Abstract American Artists (AAA) held their inaugural exhibition, von Wiegand reviewed it. An early champion of abstract art, von Wiegand became close friends with AAA founder Carl Holty. In 1941, Holty introduced von Wiegand to Piet Mondrian, who would have a profound impact on her art. Fascinated by Mondrian’s artistic philosophy, von Wiegand played a key role in the introduction of his work to American audiences, translating many of the Dutch artist’s writings into English and assisting in the composition of his influential article “Toward the True Vision of Reality” (1941). Through her friendship with Mondrian, von Wiegand re-kindled her interest in Theosophy (a religion established in the late 19th century that combines aspects of Hinduism, Buddhism, occultism, and esotericism) and embarked on an extended study of neoplasticism. In her artwork, she incorporated Mondrian’s iconic grid but rejected the constraints of pure neoplasticism and embraced a wide range of influences including surrealism and German expressionism. In 1942, von Wiegand became a member of the AAA, exhibiting regularly with the group and eventually serving as its president from 1951 to 1953. In the late 1940s, sculptor and fellow AAA member Ibram Lassaw gave her a translation of The Secret of the Golden Flower: A Chinese Book of Life, which inspired von Wiegand to immerse herself in a study of Buddhist art. She began incorporating Buddhist motifs such as stupas and mandalas into her paintings, and her spiritual practice steadily intensified throughout the 1950s. In 1953, her husband gifted her a copy of the Taoist I Ching Book of Changes, a guide for divining meaning from randomly derived numbers arranged in a hexagram—a form the artist readily incorporated into her painting. Von Wiegand’s study of Theosophy also intensified over these years, bolstered by her increased access to the religion’s primary sources composed by the religion’s founders and their successors at the New York Theosophical Society’s library. Von Wiegand’s search for the sacred and transcendent ultimately led her to Tibetan Buddhism and, in 1967, von Wiegand met Khyongla Rato Rinpoche, a Gelugpa monk who had recently arrived in New York, who would mentor her spiritual study in the tradition of Mahayana Buddhism until her death. Her travels in the 1960s and 1970s took her to Tibet and India, where she had an audience with the Dalai Lama, who was living in exile in Dharamsala. Many works from these decades incorporate symbols and schematics drawn from Theosophical prismatic color charts, Chinese astrology and tantric yoga. In 1978, she was the subject of a PBS documentary titled The Circle of Charmion von Wiegand, which was scored by Philip Glass. In 1980, von Wiegand was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters and in 1982, the Bass Museum of Art in Miami Beach (FL) organized her first retrospective exhibition. She died the following year in New York, bequeathing her estate to Khyongla Rato and the Tibet Center of New York. In 1998, Michael Rosenfeld Gallery became the sole representative of her estate and has presented her work in four solo and multiple group exhibitions. Recent notable exhibitions that have included her work are The Third Mind: American Artists Contemplate Asia (Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY, 2009) and Constructive Spirit: Abstract Art in South and North America (Newark Museum, NJ, 2010). In March 2023, the Kunstmuseum Basel (Switzerland) opened the first comprehensive museum retrospective of von Wiegand’s work in Europe. Von Wiegand’s work is represented in numerous museum collections including the Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy (Andover, MA); Albright-Knox Art Gallery (Buffalo, NY); Arithmeum, University of Bonn (Germany); Birmingham Museum of Art (Alabama); Blanton Museum of Art, The University of Texas at Austin; Brooklyn Museum (NY); Carnegie Museum of Art (Pittsburgh, PA); The Cleveland Museum of Art (OH); Indianapolis Museum of Art (IN); Fondazione Marguerite Arp (Locarno, Switzerland); Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (Massachusetts); The Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, NY); The Museum of Modern Art (New York, NY); Newark Museum of Art (New Jersey); Seattle Art Museum (WA); Smithsonian American Art Museum (Washington, DC); Walker Art Center (Minneapolis, MN); Weatherspoon Art Museum, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro; Wellin Museum of Art at Hamilton College (Clinton, NY); Whitney Museum of American Art (New York, NY); and Yale University Art Gallery (New Haven, CT). More about gallerist Andre Zarre A tribute in the New Criterion: Dispatch August 11, 2020 Andre Zarre, 1942–2020 by Dana Gordon On the late New York gallery pioneer. Art should never be aggressively explained; art should be felt. —Andre Zarre, 1977 Often, in the starlit New York cultural mecca, a longtime important figure fades away through the penumbra and dies without notice. Such was the fate of Andre Zarre, the contemporary art dealer, who passed away a few weeks ago. Andy, as he wanted friends to call him, opened his eponymous gallery in 1974 just off Madison Avenue on Sixty-ninth Street. He soon moved it to the omphalos of the art world in that era, 41 East Fifty-seventh Street, the Fuller Building. Over the years he moved to SoHo and then to Chelsea, as fashion and real estate prices pushed the art souk hither and thither. To understand his importance, all you need do is take a look at a list of artists who had solo shows at the Andre Zarre Gallery. This includes such names, from an early generation, as Sonia Delaunay, Nassos Daphnis, Sari Dienes, and Perle Fine. Among a subsequent generation are Pat Lipsky, Jay Milder, Thornton Willis, and Kes Zapkus.1 And this list does not include the many knowns and unknowns who were in his lively group shows. Zarre had a real “eye” and was a champion of abstract art from the moment he founded his gallery—even among the gathering storms of conceptual and political art, which he eschewed. He showed a good deal of figurative art as well. His galleries were always spacious and unpretentious, oriented simply to show the art. In the words of Dee Shapiro, who showed with the Zarre gallery many times, “He had a photographic memory and knew a lot about art and was always interested in the artist’s life.” Reliable biographical information on Zarre is scarce, but he said of his background that he was born in Poland in 1942 and that his parents were a diplomat and a socialite. He left home for the United States at the age of fifteen. During his decades as an art dealer in New York, Zarre did not appear to accumulate wealth, though he acquired a collection and lived on Park Avenue. “He was not personally aggressive in that way. People had to come to him,” Dee Shapiro said. He was honest in his financial dealings with artists, which not all art dealers are. For a long time while running the gallery he had a second job as a supervisor in an airline office and he kept little to no additional staff in the gallery. He supported a brother who remained in Poland. Among artists, Zarre was known to be quite ornery. After my show at his gallery in 1997, I refused to enter it for seventeen years. Then I ran into him in Chelsea and he offered me another show, an opportunity I gladly accepted, but he remained just as disagreeable. He showed the work of many women, probably more than any other gallery, save those devoted to showing only women. Collectors, curators, and writers found him mostly friendly. As Peter Reginato put it, Zarre was a “strange guy but I liked him. I think he was a dealer who was more interested in the art than in making money, but somehow he lasted forty-plus years.” Zarre is not known to have kept extensive or extant records of his gallery’s long history, though these may emerge in time. Scouring the Internet, one may compile a partial list of more than eighty artists who had solo shows at the Andre Zarre Gallery:Nancy Azara, Ellen Banks, Mary Barnes, Tony Bechara, Juan Bernal, Stephanie Bernheim, Randy Bloom, Elena Borstein, Michael Boyd, Fritz Bultman, Ed Buonagurio, Yoan Capote, Sonia Delaunay, Nassos Daphnis, Cathy Diamond, Sari Dienes, Joseph Dolinsky, Beata Drozd, Ronnie Elliot, William Fares, Perle Fine, Lynne Frehm, Ben Georgia, Mikel Glass, Dana Gordon, Juanita Guccione, Fred Gutzeit, Don Hazlitt, Amy Hill, Clinton Hill, Monroe Hodder, Budd Hopkins, Arlan Huang, Richard Hunt, Rhia Hurt, Buffie Johnson, Alexander Kaletski, Robert Kaupelis...

Category

1950s Abstract Georges Villa Art

Materials

Paper, Gouache

Blustery Clouds, Stormy Sky Landscape, Blue Tones, Extra Large Cyanotype, Paper
Blustery Clouds, Stormy Sky Landscape, Blue Tones, Extra Large Cyanotype, Paper

Blustery Clouds, Stormy Sky Landscape, Blue Tones, Extra Large Cyanotype, Paper

By Kind of Cyan

Located in Barcelona, ES

This is an exclusive handprinted limited edition cyanotype. "Blustery Clouds" is an cyanotype of the semi-abstract patterns of clouds in the sky after a storm. Details: + Title: Blu...

Category

2010s Realist Georges Villa Art

Materials

Paper, Emulsion, Watercolor, Etching, Lithograph

"Jacomo Monte-Carlo Open, " Original Lithograph Poster by Pierre Fix-Masseau
"Jacomo Monte-Carlo Open, " Original Lithograph Poster by Pierre Fix-Masseau

"Jacomo Monte-Carlo Open, " Original Lithograph Poster by Pierre Fix-Masseau

By Pierre Fix-Masseau

Located in Milwaukee, WI

"Jacomo Monte-Carlo Open" is an original lithograph poster by Pierre Fix-Masseau. The artist signed the piece in the image lower right. This poster advertises a tennis competition fr...

Category

1980s Art Deco Georges Villa Art

Materials

Lithograph

Previously Available Items
Entr'Acte

Georges VillaEntr'Acte

Sold

H 24.5 in W 19.25 in

Entr'Acte

By Georges Villa

Located in Los Angeles, CA

Georges Elias Villa Marie was born on january 24 1883. He was best known as a cartoonist, caricaturist, engraver and illustrator. He studied at the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris and exhibited at the Salon des Artistes Français. Known for his excellent portraiture skills, he was invited to Russia by the Grand Duke Vladimir, uncle of Tsar Nicolas II in order to execute portraits of officers...

Category

1920s Post-Impressionist Georges Villa Art

Materials

Pastel

Georges Villa art for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Georges Villa art available for sale on 1stDibs. You can also browse by medium to find art by Georges Villa in paper, lithograph, fabric and more. Much of the original work by this artist or collective was created during the 20th century and is mostly associated with the Art Deco style. Not every interior allows for large Georges Villa art, so small editions measuring 24 inches across are available. Customers who are interested in this artist might also find the work of Rene Vincent, Charles Turzak, and Roger de Valerio. Georges Villa art prices can differ depending upon medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $834 and tops out at $2,168, while the average work can sell for $1,089.

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