Kazuhisa Honda Still-life Prints
to
1
1
Overall Width
to
Overall Height
to
1
1
3
124
116
72
50
2
2
1
1
2
2
2
2
2
Artist: Kazuhisa Honda
Sleepless Night, gorgeous Color mezzotint Rives BFK Signed 18/50 Japanese artist
By Kazuhisa Honda
Located in New York, NY
Kazuhisa Honda
Sleepless Night, 1981
Color mezzotint on Rives BFK watermarked paper
Signed, dated, titled and numbered 18/50 on the front
14 × 19 inches
Unframed
Accompanied by COA i...
Category
1980s Contemporary Kazuhisa Honda Still-life Prints
Materials
Mezzotint
Lemon Tree
By Kazuhisa Honda
Located in Missouri, MO
Kazuhisa Honda (b. 1948)
"Lemon Tree" c. 1980s
Mezzotint
Signed Lower Right
Numbered Lower Left 81/250
Site Size: approx. 8 x 5 inches
Framed Size: approx...
Category
1980s Modern Kazuhisa Honda Still-life Prints
Materials
Mezzotint
Related Items
Still Night (Brooklyn brownstones on 7th Avenue off Flatbush Avenue)
By Frederick Mershimer
Located in New Orleans, LA
In "Still Night", Frederick Mershimer depicts a row of brownstone houses on Seventh Avenue near Flatbush Avenue between Park and Stirling Places. Mershimer remembers that as he was ...
Category
1980s American Modern Kazuhisa Honda Still-life Prints
Materials
Mezzotint
Rio Osmarin (boats on the canal Rio de S. Provolo o de l'Osmarin, Venice)
By Judith Rothchild
Located in New Orleans, LA
Rio Osmarin shows boats on the canal Rio de S. Provolo o de l'Osmarin in Venice) It was created in 2006 and this impression is #31 of 75 It is signed, titled, numbered and dated by...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Kazuhisa Honda Still-life Prints
Materials
Mezzotint
Sewing Circles
By Carol Wax
Located in New Orleans, LA
A play on words provides the title for this image -- a circle created out of the deconstructed parts of Singer IV This image is #37 from an edition of only 50, referenced as Firos 78...
Category
1990s American Modern Kazuhisa Honda Still-life Prints
Materials
Mezzotint
Bambalina (Are ornaments, decorations mere backdrop for true Christmas story)
By Francisco Souto
Located in New Orleans, LA
Souto named this image Bambalina (backstage). It is an exclusive publication of Stone and Press Gallery.
Francisco Souto was born in Venezuela. He received a BFA from Herron Schoo...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Kazuhisa Honda Still-life Prints
Materials
Mezzotint
Snail in a Bowl (Artist Proof inscribed to Fritz Eichenberg)
Located in New Orleans, LA
Leonard Merchant's mezzotint, "Snail in Cup" is inscribed for fellow artist, Fritz Eichenberg.
While a student at the Central School for Arts and Crafts in London, a young Leonard Marchant found an engraving rocker in a cupboard and proceeded to turn himself into a master of the painstaking art of mezzotinting.
Marchant, who has died in Shrewsbury aged 70, grew up in Simonstown, the Royal Navy's enclave in South Africa. Though his first job was as a parliamentary messenger, he taught himself to paint and, aged 19, was given a one-man show in Cape Town. Fired by this success, he left for England to study painting and, he claimed, to escape the stifling home atmosphere created by his Catholic mother and aunts. (His father was killed in the second world war.) Without contacts in London, he phoned Jacob Epstein, whose recommendation resulted in a grant to study briefly at the Central School. It was later, when studying full-time at the Central, that he saw the mezzotints of the Japanese master, Yozo Hamaguchi, in a London gallery. He was hooked.
Creating a mezzotint is tedious in the extreme. The copper plate must first be prepared with a "rocker" which roughens the surface. A plate may be "rocked" 30 or 40 times. The rough texture is then reduced with a burnisher and a scraper, allowing the print a range of tones from velvety black through the greys to white. Marchant's plates could be months in the making. But the technical demands were the least of his worries. In its 18th- and 19th-century heyday, mezzotint was solely a reproductive medium, for copying masters such as Reynolds and Turner. The development of photography rendered it unfashionable, and by the 1960s the technique, known as la manière anglaise, was a bygone medium.
Marchant, by now a teacher in printmaking at the Central, began to create original mezzotints with a colleague, Radavan Kraguly. A perfectionist, he seemed to revel in the straitjacket procedure. Perhaps it was the metaphor of bringing darkness out of light that appealed to this straight-talking, sometimes sombre, man, who would suddenly relax and light up like a gleaming hue on one of his prints. His work was of squares and triangles with the occasional cat, black and ominous, and carefully arranged still lifes, featuring plants, a seed pod, a pot he might have bought at auction to celebrate the sale of a print.
There were one-man shows, notably at the Bankside Gallery. He sold well at the Royal Academy summer exhibition, was a Florence Biennale prizewinner, spent a fellowship year at the British School in Rome, and was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers.
But making mezzotints was not a paying job. Marchant and his South African wife...
Category
1980s Modern Kazuhisa Honda Still-life Prints
Materials
Mezzotint
Lotus
By Maki Hino
Located in New Orleans, LA
Hino creates a still life of a lotus from an edition of 65. A prominent figure in Buddhist and Egyptian culture, and native flower for both India and Vietnam, the lotus holds enormous symbolic weight. It spans various thousand-year-old Eastern cultures and yet, is still considered one of the most sacred flowers today. So what is it about this mysterious blossom that people find so enrapturing? Its colorful bloom is an obvious suspect, but the lotus also has a life cycle unlike any other. With its roots based in mud, it submerges every night into murky river water, and—undeterred by its dirty environment—it miraculously re-blooms the next morning without residue on its petals.
Although cultures have their own interpretations of this daily process, there is a general consensus among ancient texts...
Category
1990s American Modern Kazuhisa Honda Still-life Prints
Materials
Mezzotint
In Memory of an Historic Phrase
By Marc Balakjian
Located in New Orleans, LA
Marc Balakjian was enigmatic in his subject matter creating images that are disturbing in their ambiguity. Is this image just striped fabric tied with ropes on a platform or is this is a flag-draped coffin symbolizing those who passed "in memory of an historic phrase"? Politicians may turn the phrase but a price must be paid. This small edition mezzotint was created in 1975 in an edition of only 5.
Armenian by descent, Marc Balakjian was raised in Lebanon. He spent his early years in the small town of Rayak, before moving to Beirut at the age of 10. He came to England in 1966, initially to study architecture with a firm in Oxford. He then decided to study art at Hammersmith College of Art and took up a postgraduate degree in printmaking at the Slade School of Art in 1971. After graduating he began working at Studio Prints in 1973, just as it was establishing itself in Queen’s Crescent. By 1976 he had become a full time partner, collaborating with other artists as well as continuing his own work, much of which is inspired by his Armenian and Lebanese culture and heritage.
By the 1980s work was falling off, so Balakjian and Studio Prints introduced in-house plate-making to serve painters and sculptors who had little experience with printmaking. Artists such as Leon Kossoff, Frank Auerbach, Lucian Freud and Ken Kiff...
Category
1970s Modern Kazuhisa Honda Still-life Prints
Materials
Mezzotint
Drapery Against Black
By Holly Downing
Located in New Orleans, LA
This black and white mezzotint is in an edition of 30. It is titled, numbered #1/30 and signed in pencil.
Holly Downing is a painter and printmaker who has been making mezzotint e...
Category
1980s Contemporary Kazuhisa Honda Still-life Prints
Materials
Mezzotint
Jacques Dupin, L'Issue Dérobée: one plate
By Joan Miró
Located in Collonge Bellerive, Geneve, CH
One plate from the illustrated book Jacques Dupin, L'Issue Dérobée, Maeght Editeur, Paris, 1974
Original prints by Joan Miro (C. books 187)
Edition: 220
Individual images are unsigne...
Category
1970s Modern Kazuhisa Honda Still-life Prints
Materials
Drypoint, Aquatint
Scopes
By Carol Wax
Located in New Orleans, LA
The marriage between the art of science and the art of seeing was cemented by the invention of the lens. It is FIROS #48 in the catalogue raisonne.
Carol Wax originally trained to b...
Category
Late 20th Century American Modern Kazuhisa Honda Still-life Prints
Materials
Mezzotint
Trivium MMV
By Francisco Souto
Located in New Orleans, LA
In medieval universities, the trivium comprised the three subjects that were taught first: grammar, logic, and rhetoric. The word is a Latin term meaning "the three ways" or "the thr...
Category
Early 2000s American Modern Kazuhisa Honda Still-life Prints
Materials
Mezzotint, Lithograph, Screen
'Celebration (Homage to Sharon)' signed artist's proof I/XXV giclée print
By David Barnett
Located in Milwaukee, WI
‘Celebration (Homage to Sharon)’ is an artist’s proof giclée print, signed and dated by the artist in the lower right. This piece is a part of Barnett’s ‘Morph Dog Series,’ so named for his use of a “morph dog”—a dog-shaped foam sculpture that transforms into a cube when turned inside out—to paint. Against a muted horizon, multicolored rings...
Category
Early 2000s Contemporary Kazuhisa Honda Still-life Prints
Materials
Giclée
Previously Available Items
Piano and Violin
By Kazuhisa Honda
Located in Fairlawn, OH
Signed and numbered by the artist
An edition of 85
Image: 9 X 7 1/16 inches
Category
1980s Kazuhisa Honda Still-life Prints
Materials
Mezzotint
Kazuhisa Honda still-life prints for sale on 1stDibs.
Find a wide variety of authentic Kazuhisa Honda still-life prints available for sale on 1stDibs. You can also browse by medium to find art by Kazuhisa Honda in engraving, mezzotint and more. Much of the original work by this artist or collective was created during the 1980s and is mostly associated with the modern style. Not every interior allows for large Kazuhisa Honda still-life prints, so small editions measuring 13 inches across are available. Customers who are interested in this artist might also find the work of Gochka Charewicz, Ed Baynard, and Mario Avati.