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Josh Pazda Hiram Butler Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

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Homan-Ji III
By Jennifer Bartlett
Located in Houston, TX
Jennifer Bartlett Homan-Ji III, 1995 Gouache and gold leaf on paper 24 1/2 x 24 in (62.2 x 61 cm) sheet
Category

Late 20th Century Abstract Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Gold Leaf

Double Pyramid Thought Form
By Matt Magee
Located in Houston, TX
Matt Magee Double Pyramid Thought Form, 2019 Oil on aluminum 25 1/2 x 19 1/4 in (64.8 x 48.9 cm) JPHB 5837
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Geometric Abstract Drawings and W...

Materials

Oil

Untitled
By Jack Davidson
Located in Houston, TX
Jack Davidson Untitled, 2008 Gouache on paper 22.5 x 15 in (57.2 x 38.1 cm) JPHB 5682
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Geometric Abstract Drawings and W...

Materials

Paper, Gouache

In the Garden of the Hummingbirds, No. XIX
By Michael Tracy
Located in Houston, TX
Michael Tracy In the Garden of the Hummingbirds, No XIX, 1992 22 1/2 x 30 in (57.2 x 76.2 cm), unframed 25 1/2 x 33 1/2 in (64.8 x 85.1 cm), framed JPHB 5649
Category

Late 20th Century Abstract Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Oil Pastel, Watercolor, Gouache

Field Study #749
By Terrell James
Located in Houston, TX
Terrell James Field Study #749, 2020 Oil on vellum 20 x 16 in (50.8 x 40.6 cm)
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Oil, Vellum

BARK
By David Hutchinson
Located in Houston, TX
David Hutchinson BARK, 2021 Unique archival inkjet print 24 x 18 inches (16 x 45.7 cm)
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Inkjet

HIDE
By David Hutchinson
Located in Houston, TX
David Hutchinson HIDE, 2021 Unique archival inkjet print 24 x 18 inches (16 x 45.7 cm)
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Inkjet

Here and There #4
By Kate Shepherd
Located in Houston, TX
Kate Shepherd Here and There #4, 2020 Enamel and transfer on paper 12 1/2 x 19 inches
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Geometric Drawings and Watercolor...

Materials

Enamel

Untitled
By Mark Fox
Located in Houston, TX
Mark Fox Untitled, 2018 Acrylic ink and wax crayon on paper 50 x 38 inches Framed
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Drawings and Watercolor Paint...

Materials

Wax Crayon, Acrylic

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Simon Samsonian (1912 - 2003) Colorful Geometric Abstraction, 1981 Oil on paper 16 x 22 inches Signed and dated lower right Provenance: Estate of the artist This survivor of the Armenian genocide wound up in a Cairo orphanage in 1927. He rose to fame as one of Egypt’s great modernists, but after moving to Long Island late in life he withdrew into anonymity. Now his compelling story is being told. Art historians are finally beginning to realize that the power of abstraction in its early years was a zeitgeist not limited to the major European centers of the avant-garde — Paris, Munich, and Moscow — but one that quickly rippled to major cities throughout the world. Within a few decades that original shock of a new vision had inspired thousands of artists from different cultures — particularly those the Middle East — whose translations were not slavish imitations of works by seminal figures like Picasso, Braque, Malevich, and Kandinsky but creative variants colored by their respective cultures. This essay focuses on an extraordinary Armenian artist, his harrowing survival of the genocide, his rise to fame in Cairo, and his creation of a unique style of abstraction. Art historians have typically formed a chorus that teaches the history of abstraction like this: Just before and during the World War I era, several avant-garde artists emerged to create shockingly different new forms by which artists could express themselves. In Paris, Picasso and Braque broke out with cubism, quickly followed by Mondrian. In Moscow, Malevich created Suprematism, the ultimate hard-edge geometric abstraction. 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Because he only knew his first name, the orphanage gave him a last name based on the place where they found him — Samsun — a major port on Turkey’s north coast on the Black Sea. His birth date was unknown, too. According to Samsonian’s vague recollections he assumed he was about three or four years old at the onset of the genocide, which would place his birth year in 1911 or 1912. In 1922, when Samsonian was about 10, the Turks ended their war with the Greeks by putting Smyrna to the torch in what has been called the “Catastrophe of Smyrna.” Once again, the child was on the run, escaping the fire and slaughter. He found temporary refuge in Constantinople, but within a year that major port would fall to the Turks, too, and become renamed as Istanbul. This time, Samsonian was whisked away to an orphanage in Greece founded by the American charity, Near East Relief — which is credited with saving so many Armenian orphans that the American historian Howard M. Sachar said it “quite literally kept an entire nation alive. Any understanding of Samsonian’s approach to modernism requires careful consideration of the impact of his early years because his art is inseparable from the anguish he experienced. In 1927, when he was a teenager, he was transferred to Cairo, Egypt, then a cosmopolitan city hosting a sizable portion of the Armenian diaspora. There he lived with thirty-two other children on the top floor of the Kalousdian Armenian School. Upon graduating in 1932 he won a scholarship to attend the Leonardo da Vinci Art Institute — an Italian art school in Cairo — where he won first prize in final examinations among one hundred students. He found work with an Armenian lithographic printer and he returned to the Kalousdian Armenian School to teach drawing. In 1939 he married one of his students, Lucy Guendimian. The Cairo in which Samsonian matured as an artist was home to many prominent art collectors after World War I. In this receptive environment Samsonian exhibited widely and won many awards. Beginning in 1937 and for the next thirty years he exhibited annually at the prestigious Le Salon du Caire hosted by the Société les Amis de l’Art (founded in 1921). After World War II he hit his stride as a modernist in Cairo, counting among his peers other artists of the Armenian diaspora such as Onnig Avedissian, Achod Zorian, Gregoire Meguerdichian, Hagop Hagopian...
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