Skip to main content

International Fine Arts Consortium - IFAC Arts Art

to
117
8
6
63
35
18
23
20
16
17
41
Overall Height
to
Overall Width
to
1,871
1,271
19
9
3
3
3
1
1
1
5
112
5
13
12
12
9
8
76
48
39
38
38
Style: Abstract
Death of Marat
By Eric Friedmann
Located in New York, NY
Eric Friedmann Death of Marat, 2018 Acrylic polymer and pigment on canvas 200 x 150 cm
Category

2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic Polymer

Cacodylic, from the Inevitable Feeling Series, 2016
By Misha Milovanovich
Located in New York, NY
Misha Milovanovich Cacodylic from the Inevitable Feeling Series, 2016 Acrylic & oil pastel, ink, enamel and celulose paint on canvas. 72 x 59 cm Hovering between painting, drawing and watercolour sketches, her new work represents a form of personal expression that is less concerned with the impact and novelty of popular culture and more about the quiet uncovering of emotion. Her trademark organic forms are still present though now they are empathetic rather than explosively joyful. The colours are softer, somewhat washed out and hazy, as if half-perceived or remembered. The colour palette and the energy of the mark making reference to the now buried source material -  abstracted Hentai illustrations, Japanese manga-infused depictions of male dominance, rape and power fantasies. The never-satisfied, always distracted state in which this dislocated field of sexual aggression persists stands in for our instantly redundant, surface only culture- transactional, bullying and ephemeral.   Her paintings are sensorially rich and and yet muted, the masses of fleshy intersections and writhing calligraphy feel like they are moving out of the immediate present and floating up out of time.   They are soaked in the in nuances of early modernism- Klee, Miro and Matta. She explores emotive, expressionistic tender spaces in these lyrically rendered conceptual paintings - densely layered works that operate in the enigmatic gaps between rational structure and spontaneity. Misha also echoes Kandinsky and his sensuality of musical movement, evoking his concerns with the spiritual, all emerging naturally from the rich soil she has carefully laid down in her previous work. The language and texture of her materials are important to Misha who prepares her own pigment- paying great attention to form, surface and the moment-to moment physicality of her practice. Misha Milovanovich is a Belgrade-born artist living and working in London. Misha works across several mediums, from sculpture to painting and live art. Characterised by vivid colour, optical movement and energetic visual cadences, Misha's visual work fuses a diverse repertoire of images and forms. She often features discarded shards of consumerism - unloved icons of disposability and careless consumption. Misha's work is often a symphonic abstraction. Her colourful, densely layered works are held in a state of tension between order and chaos, rational structure and spontaneity. She combines depth and surface relief, orchestrating bold contrasts of form, texture and space in her pictures. An intimate colour palette of bodily fluids - red, pink, white, black, yellow and brown - animate the writhing forms and the refracted memories of cartoonish cultural production. A cultural polymath, Misha is constantly engaged in observing society and it’s distortions of desire, lust and attitudes to the body. Traditional techniques have been studied and absorbed and although her work is partly conceptual, it's execution always reflects these hard won technical abilities. Misha's main subject matter is emotion, so naturally her work is highly personal and biographical in ways that create a direct, emotional response from the viewer. Empathy and the universals of human experience - passion, nostalgia, desire and disgust are inescapable in her work. Misha is herself a ‘displaced’ person, having left Serbia for London in her late teens she still carries within her a ‘stranger’s perspective’ and perceives the world as an outsider, someone ever alert to the non-verbal subtleties of communication. Misha's artistic progenitors include her mentor Martin Kippenberger, Wassily Kandinsky and Phillip Guston as well as contemporary artists Gilbert and George, Keith Tyson, Robert Pruitt...
Category

2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Mixed Media, Oil, Acrylic

Alotrope I Series (Black and White)
By Sofia Housou
Located in New York, NY
Sofia Housou Alotrope Series oil on canvas 110 x 110 cm Sofia Housou’s post-abstract expressionist oeuvre operates in a dramatic background where colour becomes the vocabulary for ...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

BimbiBerryBaba from the Inevitable Feeling Series
By Misha Milovanovich
Located in New York, NY
Misha Milovanovich BimbiBerryBaba from the Inevitable Feeling Series, 2016 Acrylic & oil pastel, ink, enamel and celulose paint on canvas. 72 x 59 cm Hovering between painting, drawing and watercolour sketches, her new work represents a form of personal expression that is less concerned with the impact and novelty of popular culture and more about the quiet uncovering of emotion. Her trademark organic forms are still present though now they are empathetic rather than explosively joyful. The colours are softer, somewhat washed out and hazy, as if half-perceived or remembered. The colour palette and the energy of the mark making reference to the now buried source material -  abstracted Hentai illustrations, Japanese manga-infused depictions of male dominance, rape and power fantasies. The never-satisfied, always distracted state in which this dislocated field of sexual aggression persists stands in for our instantly redundant, surface only culture- transactional, bullying and ephemeral.   Her paintings are sensorially rich and and yet muted, the masses of fleshy intersections and writhing calligraphy feel like they are moving out of the immediate present and floating up out of time.   They are soaked in the in nuances of early modernism- Klee, Miro and Matta. She explores emotive, expressionistic tender spaces in these lyrically rendered conceptual paintings - densely layered works that operate in the enigmatic gaps between rational structure and spontaneity. Misha also echoes Kandinsky and his sensuality of musical movement, evoking his concerns with the spiritual, all emerging naturally from the rich soil she has carefully laid down in her previous work. The language and texture of her materials are important to Misha who prepares her own pigment- paying great attention to form, surface and the moment-to moment physicality of her practice. Misha Milovanovich is a Belgrade-born artist living and working in London. Misha works across several mediums, from sculpture to painting and live art. Characterised by vivid colour, optical movement and energetic visual cadences, Misha's visual work fuses a diverse repertoire of images and forms. She often features discarded shards of consumerism - unloved icons of disposability and careless consumption. Misha's work is often a symphonic abstraction. Her colourful, densely layered works are held in a state of tension between order and chaos, rational structure and spontaneity. She combines depth and surface relief, orchestrating bold contrasts of form, texture and space in her pictures. An intimate colour palette of bodily fluids - red, pink, white, black, yellow and brown - animate the writhing forms and the refracted memories of cartoonish cultural production. A cultural polymath, Misha is constantly engaged in observing society and it’s distortions of desire, lust and attitudes to the body. Traditional techniques have been studied and absorbed and although her work is partly conceptual, it's execution always reflects these hard won technical abilities. Misha's main subject matter is emotion, so naturally her work is highly personal and biographical in ways that create a direct, emotional response from the viewer. Empathy and the universals of human experience - passion, nostalgia, desire and disgust are inescapable in her work. Misha is herself a ‘displaced’ person, having left Serbia for London in her late teens she still carries within her a ‘stranger’s perspective’ and perceives the world as an outsider, someone ever alert to the non-verbal subtleties of communication. Misha's artistic progenitors include her mentor Martin Kippenberger, Wassily Kandinsky and Phillip Guston as well as contemporary artists Gilbert and George, Keith Tyson, Robert Pruitt...
Category

2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Mixed Media, Oil, Acrylic

White, from the Inevitable Feeling Series, 2016
By Misha Milovanovich
Located in New York, NY
Misha Milovanovich White from the Inevitable Feeling Series, 2016 Acrylic & oil pastel, ink, enamel and celulose paint on canvas. 72 x 59 cm Hovering between painting, drawing and watercolour sketches, her new work represents a form of personal expression that is less concerned with the impact and novelty of popular culture and more about the quiet uncovering of emotion. Her trademark organic forms are still present though now they are empathetic rather than explosively joyful. The colours are softer, somewhat washed out and hazy, as if half-perceived or remembered. The colour palette and the energy of the mark making reference to the now buried source material -  abstracted Hentai illustrations, Japanese manga-infused depictions of male dominance, rape and power fantasies. The never-satisfied, always distracted state in which this dislocated field of sexual aggression persists stands in for our instantly redundant, surface only culture- transactional, bullying and ephemeral.   Her paintings are sensorially rich and and yet muted, the masses of fleshy intersections and writhing calligraphy feel like they are moving out of the immediate present and floating up out of time.   They are soaked in the in nuances of early modernism- Klee, Miro and Matta. She explores emotive, expressionistic tender spaces in these lyrically rendered conceptual paintings - densely layered works that operate in the enigmatic gaps between rational structure and spontaneity. Misha also echoes Kandinsky and his sensuality of musical movement, evoking his concerns with the spiritual, all emerging naturally from the rich soil she has carefully laid down in her previous work. The language and texture of her materials are important to Misha who prepares her own pigment- paying great attention to form, surface and the moment-to moment physicality of her practice. Misha Milovanovich is a Belgrade-born artist living and working in London. Misha works across several mediums, from sculpture to painting and live art. Characterised by vivid colour, optical movement and energetic visual cadences, Misha's visual work fuses a diverse repertoire of images and forms. She often features discarded shards of consumerism - unloved icons of disposability and careless consumption. Misha's work is often a symphonic abstraction. Her colourful, densely layered works are held in a state of tension between order and chaos, rational structure and spontaneity. She combines depth and surface relief, orchestrating bold contrasts of form, texture and space in her pictures. An intimate colour palette of bodily fluids - red, pink, white, black, yellow and brown - animate the writhing forms and the refracted memories of cartoonish cultural production. A cultural polymath, Misha is constantly engaged in observing society and it’s distortions of desire, lust and attitudes to the body. Traditional techniques have been studied and absorbed and although her work is partly conceptual, it's execution always reflects these hard won technical abilities. Misha's main subject matter is emotion, so naturally her work is highly personal and biographical in ways that create a direct, emotional response from the viewer. Empathy and the universals of human experience - passion, nostalgia, desire and disgust are inescapable in her work. Misha is herself a ‘displaced’ person, having left Serbia for London in her late teens she still carries within her a ‘stranger’s perspective’ and perceives the world as an outsider, someone ever alert to the non-verbal subtleties of communication. Misha's artistic progenitors include her mentor Martin Kippenberger, Wassily Kandinsky and Phillip Guston as well as contemporary artists Gilbert and George, Keith Tyson, Robert Pruitt...
Category

2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Mixed Media, Oil, Acrylic

Our Heads Are Round So That Our Thoughts Can Change Directons- Picabia
By Misha Milovanovich
Located in New York, NY
Misha Milovanovich Our Heads Are Round So That Our Thoughts Can Change Directons- Picabia from the Inevitable Feeling Series, 2016 Acrylic & oil pastel, ink, enamel and celulose paint on canvas. 72 x 59 cm Hovering between painting, drawing and watercolour sketches, her new work represents a form of personal expression that is less concerned with the impact and novelty of popular culture and more about the quiet uncovering of emotion. Her trademark organic forms are still present though now they are empathetic rather than explosively joyful. The colours are softer, somewhat washed out and hazy, as if half-perceived or remembered. The colour palette and the energy of the mark making reference to the now buried source material -  abstracted Hentai illustrations, Japanese manga-infused depictions of male dominance, rape and power fantasies. The never-satisfied, always distracted state in which this dislocated field of sexual aggression persists stands in for our instantly redundant, surface only culture- transactional, bullying and ephemeral.   Her paintings are sensorially rich and and yet muted, the masses of fleshy intersections and writhing calligraphy feel like they are moving out of the immediate present and floating up out of time.   They are soaked in the in nuances of early modernism- Klee, Miro and Matta. She explores emotive, expressionistic tender spaces in these lyrically rendered conceptual paintings - densely layered works that operate in the enigmatic gaps between rational structure and spontaneity. Misha also echoes Kandinsky and his sensuality of musical movement, evoking his concerns with the spiritual, all emerging naturally from the rich soil she has carefully laid down in her previous work. The language and texture of her materials are important to Misha who prepares her own pigment- paying great attention to form, surface and the moment-to moment physicality of her practice. Misha Milovanovich is a Belgrade-born artist living and working in London. Misha works across several mediums, from sculpture to painting and live art. Characterised by vivid colour, optical movement and energetic visual cadences, Misha's visual work fuses a diverse repertoire of images and forms. She often features discarded shards of consumerism - unloved icons of disposability and careless consumption. Misha's work is often a symphonic abstraction. Her colourful, densely layered works are held in a state of tension between order and chaos, rational structure and spontaneity. She combines depth and surface relief, orchestrating bold contrasts of form, texture and space in her pictures. An intimate colour palette of bodily fluids - red, pink, white, black, yellow and brown - animate the writhing forms and the refracted memories of cartoonish cultural production. A cultural polymath, Misha is constantly engaged in observing society and it’s distortions of desire, lust and attitudes to the body. Traditional techniques have been studied and absorbed and although her work is partly conceptual, it's execution always reflects these hard won technical abilities. Misha's main subject matter is emotion, so naturally her work is highly personal and biographical in ways that create a direct, emotional response from the viewer. Empathy and the universals of human experience - passion, nostalgia, desire and disgust are inescapable in her work. Misha is herself a ‘displaced’ person, having left Serbia for London in her late teens she still carries within her a ‘stranger’s perspective’ and perceives the world as an outsider, someone ever alert to the non-verbal subtleties of communication. Misha's artistic progenitors include her mentor Martin Kippenberger, Wassily Kandinsky and Phillip Guston as well as contemporary artists Gilbert and George, Keith Tyson, Robert Pruitt...
Category

2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Mixed Media, Oil, Acrylic

Pink, from the Inevitable Feeling Series, 2016
By Misha Milovanovich
Located in New York, NY
Misha Milovanovich Pink from the Inevitable Feeling Series, 2016 Acrylic & oil pastel, ink, enamel and celulose paint on canvas. 72 x 59 cm Hovering between painting, drawing and watercolour sketches, her new work represents a form of personal expression that is less concerned with the impact and novelty of popular culture and more about the quiet uncovering of emotion. Her trademark organic forms are still present though now they are empathetic rather than explosively joyful. The colours are softer, somewhat washed out and hazy, as if half-perceived or remembered. The colour palette and the energy of the mark making reference to the now buried source material -  abstracted Hentai illustrations, Japanese manga-infused depictions of male dominance, rape and power fantasies. The never-satisfied, always distracted state in which this dislocated field of sexual aggression persists stands in for our instantly redundant, surface only culture- transactional, bullying and ephemeral.   Her paintings are sensorially rich and and yet muted, the masses of fleshy intersections and writhing calligraphy feel like they are moving out of the immediate present and floating up out of time.   They are soaked in the in nuances of early modernism- Klee, Miro and Matta. She explores emotive, expressionistic tender spaces in these lyrically rendered conceptual paintings - densely layered works that operate in the enigmatic gaps between rational structure and spontaneity. Misha also echoes Kandinsky and his sensuality of musical movement, evoking his concerns with the spiritual, all emerging naturally from the rich soil she has carefully laid down in her previous work. The language and texture of her materials are important to Misha who prepares her own pigment- paying great attention to form, surface and the moment-to moment physicality of her practice. Misha Milovanovich is a Belgrade-born artist living and working in London. Misha works across several mediums, from sculpture to painting and live art. Characterised by vivid colour, optical movement and energetic visual cadences, Misha's visual work fuses a diverse repertoire of images and forms. She often features discarded shards of consumerism - unloved icons of disposability and careless consumption. Misha's work is often a symphonic abstraction. Her colourful, densely layered works are held in a state of tension between order and chaos, rational structure and spontaneity. She combines depth and surface relief, orchestrating bold contrasts of form, texture and space in her pictures. An intimate colour palette of bodily fluids - red, pink, white, black, yellow and brown - animate the writhing forms and the refracted memories of cartoonish cultural production. A cultural polymath, Misha is constantly engaged in observing society and it’s distortions of desire, lust and attitudes to the body. Traditional techniques have been studied and absorbed and although her work is partly conceptual, it's execution always reflects these hard won technical abilities. Misha's main subject matter is emotion, so naturally her work is highly personal and biographical in ways that create a direct, emotional response from the viewer. Empathy and the universals of human experience - passion, nostalgia, desire and disgust are inescapable in her work. Misha is herself a ‘displaced’ person, having left Serbia for London in her late teens she still carries within her a ‘stranger’s perspective’ and perceives the world as an outsider, someone ever alert to the non-verbal subtleties of communication. Misha's artistic progenitors include her mentor Martin Kippenberger, Wassily Kandinsky and Phillip Guston as well as contemporary artists Gilbert and George, Keith Tyson, Robert Pruitt...
Category

2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Mixed Media, Oil, Acrylic

Blue, from the Inevitable Feeling Series, 2016
By Misha Milovanovich
Located in New York, NY
Misha Milovanovich Blue from the Inevitable Feeling Series, 2016 Acrylic & oil pastel, ink, enamel and celulose paint on canvas. 72 x 59 cm Hovering between painting, drawing and watercolour sketches, her new work represents a form of personal expression that is less concerned with the impact and novelty of popular culture and more about the quiet uncovering of emotion. Her trademark organic forms are still present though now they are empathetic rather than explosively joyful. The colours are softer, somewhat washed out and hazy, as if half-perceived or remembered. The colour palette and the energy of the mark making reference to the now buried source material -  abstracted Hentai illustrations, Japanese manga-infused depictions of male dominance, rape and power fantasies. The never-satisfied, always distracted state in which this dislocated field of sexual aggression persists stands in for our instantly redundant, surface only culture- transactional, bullying and ephemeral.   Her paintings are sensorially rich and and yet muted, the masses of fleshy intersections and writhing calligraphy feel like they are moving out of the immediate present and floating up out of time.   They are soaked in the in nuances of early modernism- Klee, Miro and Matta. She explores emotive, expressionistic tender spaces in these lyrically rendered conceptual paintings - densely layered works that operate in the enigmatic gaps between rational structure and spontaneity. Misha also echoes Kandinsky and his sensuality of musical movement, evoking his concerns with the spiritual, all emerging naturally from the rich soil she has carefully laid down in her previous work. The language and texture of her materials are important to Misha who prepares her own pigment- paying great attention to form, surface and the moment-to moment physicality of her practice. Misha Milovanovich is a Belgrade-born artist living and working in London. Misha works across several mediums, from sculpture to painting and live art. Characterised by vivid colour, optical movement and energetic visual cadences, Misha's visual work fuses a diverse repertoire of images and forms. She often features discarded shards of consumerism - unloved icons of disposability and careless consumption. Misha's work is often a symphonic abstraction. Her colourful, densely layered works are held in a state of tension between order and chaos, rational structure and spontaneity. She combines depth and surface relief, orchestrating bold contrasts of form, texture and space in her pictures. An intimate colour palette of bodily fluids - red, pink, white, black, yellow and brown - animate the writhing forms and the refracted memories of cartoonish cultural production. A cultural polymath, Misha is constantly engaged in observing society and it’s distortions of desire, lust and attitudes to the body. Traditional techniques have been studied and absorbed and although her work is partly conceptual, it's execution always reflects these hard won technical abilities. Misha's main subject matter is emotion, so naturally her work is highly personal and biographical in ways that create a direct, emotional response from the viewer. Empathy and the universals of human experience - passion, nostalgia, desire and disgust are inescapable in her work. Misha is herself a ‘displaced’ person, having left Serbia for London in her late teens she still carries within her a ‘stranger’s perspective’ and perceives the world as an outsider, someone ever alert to the non-verbal subtleties of communication. Misha's artistic progenitors include her mentor Martin Kippenberger, Wassily Kandinsky and Phillip Guston as well as contemporary artists Gilbert and George, Keith Tyson, Robert Pruitt...
Category

2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Mixed Media, Oil, Acrylic

Mujer Primaveral
By Julian Schnabel
Located in New York, NY
Julian Schnabel Mujer Primaveral, 1996 Hand-painted, 15-color silkscreen with poured resin 40 x 30 inches (102 x 76 cm) Signed and numbered edition of 80 "Sexual Spring-like Winter"...
Category

1990s Abstract Abstract Prints

Materials

Screen

Otono Floral (Sexual Spring-like Winter)
By Julian Schnabel
Located in New York, NY
Otono Floral, 1995 Hand-painted, 15-color screenprint with poured resin 40 x 30 inches (102 x 76 cm) Edition of 80 signed in pencil and stamped on verso "Sexual Spring-like Win...
Category

1990s Abstract Expressionist Abstract Prints

Materials

Screen

Fall, from the Seasons Series
By Eric Friedmann
Located in New York, NY
Friedmann’s expressive and colorful abstractions elicit an immediacy of painting and the relativity of time. The works in the series suggest a subjective impression of movement, like...
Category

2010s Abstract Expressionist Abstract Paintings

Materials

Linen, Chalk, Oil, Acrylic

Yellow Tulips
By Eric Friedmann
Located in New York, NY
Friedmann’s expressive and colorful abstractions elicit an immediacy of painting and the relativity of time. The works in the series suggest a subjective impression of movement, like...
Category

Early 2000s Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil, Acrylic

Winter, from the Seasons Series
By Eric Friedmann
Located in New York, NY
Friedmann’s expressive and colorful abstractions elicit an immediacy of painting and the relativity of time. The works in the series suggest a subjective impression of movement, like...
Category

2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Linen, Oil

Spring, from the Seasons Series
By Eric Friedmann
Located in New York, NY
Friedmann’s expressive and colorful abstractions elicit an immediacy of painting and the relativity of time. The works in the series suggest a subjective impression of movement, like...
Category

2010s Abstract Expressionist Abstract Paintings

Materials

Encaustic, Oil, Acrylic

Abstract Grid Composition on Red
By Frank Shifreen
Located in New York, NY
These new works start from polar opposite impulses which juxtapose the purity and beauty of platonic forms opposed to impulsive muscular instantaneous painting. Shifreen internalizes...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Acrylic, Oil

Abstract Composition in Green, Black and Gray
By Frank Shifreen
Located in New York, NY
These new works start from polar opposite impulses which juxtapose the purity and beauty of platonic forms opposed to impulsive muscular instantaneous painting. Shifreen internalizes...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil, Acrylic

Invierno Primaveral (Sexual Spring-like Winter)
By Julian Schnabel
Located in New York, NY
Julian Schnabel Invierno Primaveral, 1995 Hand-painted, 17-color screenprint with poured resin 40 x 30 inches (102 x 76 cm) Edition of 80 signed in pencil and stamped on verso ...
Category

1990s Abstract Abstract Prints

Materials

Screen

Walking Shadow 9
By Maria João Salema
Located in New York, NY
Walking Shadow 9, 2013 Oil on drafting film 30 x 36 inches
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Landscape Paintings

Materials

ABS, Drafting Film, Oil

Web of Desire #1 (Large Study for experiments in Pure Painting)
By Lee Wells
Located in New York, NY
Web of Desire #1 (Large Study for Pure Painting), 2013 Acrylic on canvas 76 x 84 inches Signed, dated and titled on verso. Lee Wells is a conceptual artist, curator, and writer...
Category

2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Eyewitness 1
By Eleanna Martinou
Located in New York, NY
Eyewitnesses I Mixed media on paper on canvas 200cm x 200cm Eleanna Martinou was born in Athens (1981). Studied at the Athens School of Fine Arts (200...
Category

2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Mixed Media

Summer, from the Seasons Series
By Eric Friedmann
Located in New York, NY
Friedmann’s expressive and colorful abstractions elicit an immediacy of painting and the relativity of time. The works in the series suggest a subjective impression of movement, like...
Category

2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Linen, Acrylic

Love (Simplicity is Complex series)
By Agni Zotis
Located in New York, NY
Love (Simplicity is Complex series) Acrylic and phosphorescent pigments on canvas 72 x 66 inches
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Byzantium Zero
By Eleanna Martinou
Located in New York, NY
Byzantium Zero, 2017 Mixed-media on canvas 70 x 100 cm Eleanna Martinou was born in Athens (1981). Studied at the Athens School of Fine Arts (2006) and graduated with a MA in the Ar...
Category

2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Mixed Media

Junction Disjunction IV
By Eleanna Martinou
Located in New York, NY
Junction Disjunction IV Ink on polypropylene 150 x 450 cm Eleanna Martinou was born in Athens (1981). Studied at the Athens School of Fine Arts (2006) and graduated with a MA in the...
Category

2010s Abstract Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Archival Ink

Carbon Cycle Model (Pulse)
By Christina McPhee
Located in New York, NY
Carbon Cycle Model (Pulse), 2009 chromogenic light jet print , aluminum back mount, acrylic face mount 48.5 x 48.5 inches / 1232 x 1232 mm edition of 3 plus AP available: print 3...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Photography

Materials

C Print

Abstraction with Blast Wound
By Lee Wells
Located in New York, NY
Abstraction with Blast Wound, 2011 Oil on linen 18 x 14 inches From the exhibition Action for Freedom
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Linen, Oil

Th Fall
By Katerina Papazissi
Located in New York, NY
Katerina-Papazissi The Fall, 2016 Pasel on paper Her work constructs a universe where the body and nature, as well as inner reality, an inexplicable, overwhelming, material but...
Category

2010s Abstract Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Pastel, Archival Paper

Orange and Grey Disturbance in the Force
By Lee Wells
Located in New York, NY
Orange and Grey Disturbance in the Force, 2013 Acrylic on canvas 20 x 16 inches
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Acrylic, Canvas

Study for pure painting #1 (diptych)
By Lee Wells
Located in New York, NY
Study for pure painting #1 (diptych), 2013 Acrylic on canvas 33 x 52 inches
Category

2010s Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Study for the Street Battle
By Lee Wells
Located in New York, NY
Study for the Street Battle, 2013 Oil and fluorescent pigment on canvas 14 x 10 inches 16 x 12 inches framed Signed and annotated on the verso
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil

Gray Scale Study for Pure Painting 3
By Lee Wells
Located in New York, NY
Gray Scale Study for Pure Painting 3, 2016 Acrylic on museum board mounted to board Artwork size - 8 x 6.5 inches Framed Size - 16 x 20 inches signed and dated on recto Lee We...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Russian EVA 27 9:29 AM - 2:52 PM
By Vargas-Suarez Universal
Located in New York, NY
Vargas-Suarez Universal Russian EVA 27 9:29 AM - 2:52 PM, 2015 Enamel paint on canvas 91 x 91 cm
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Enamel

Purple Haze (Glyph)
By Christina McPhee
Located in New York, NY
Purple Haze (Glyph), 2012 ink, watercolor, colored pencil, marker ink and fluid ink on synthetic paper 25 x 38 inches / 635 x 965 mm Christina McPhee’s expansive abstract paintings, drawings, photographs, and videos test or query how can we know, and who is we? Moving from within a matrix of measurement, observation and contingent effects, her work resists characterization as product, and continually accesses fields outside itself. For her, process equals trial. Her work emulates potential forms of life, in various systems and territories, from a perspective of the non-self– a world beyond identity. McPhee’s dynamic, performative, physical engagement with materials, in both her analogue and digital works, is a seduction into surface-skidding calligraphic gestures and mark-making. The tactics of living are in subterfuge, like the ‘dazzle ships...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Archival Ink, Color Pencil, Watercolor

Venus 8 (Lung)
By Christina McPhee
Located in New York, NY
Venus 8 (Lung), 2009 ink on synthetic paper 30 x 22 in / 762 x 558 mm unframed drawing Christina McPhee’s expansive abstract paintings, drawings, photographs, and videos test or query how can we know, and who is we? Moving from within a matrix of measurement, observation and contingent effects, her work resists characterization as product, and continually accesses fields outside itself. For her, process equals trial. Her work emulates potential forms of life, in various systems and territories, from a perspective of the non-self– a world beyond identity. McPhee’s dynamic, performative, physical engagement with materials, in both her analogue and digital works, is a seduction into surface-skidding calligraphic gestures and mark-making. The tactics of living are in subterfuge, like the ‘dazzle...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Archival Ink

The Imminence of a Revelation which does not Occur
By Raymond Salvatore Harmon
Located in New York, NY
The Imminence of a Revelation which does not Occur, 2016 Oil & aerosol on folded paper/structural foam 40 x 40 x 11 inches Although RSH’s artwork originated on the streets, he h...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Mixed Media

Gray Scale Study for Pure Painting 2
By Lee Wells
Located in New York, NY
Gray Scale Study for Pure Painting 2, 2016 Acrylic on museum board mounted to board Artwork size - 8 x 6.5 inches Framed Size - 16 x 20 inches signed and dated on recto Lee We...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Expressionist Abstract Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Gray Scale Study for Pure Painting 4
By Lee Wells
Located in New York, NY
Gray Scale Study for Pure Painting 4, 2016 Acrylic on museum board mounted to board Artwork size - 8 x 6.5 inches Framed Size - 16 x 20 inches signed and dated on recto Lee We...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Impressionist Abstract Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Gray Scale Study for Pure Painting 6
By Lee Wells
Located in New York, NY
Gray Scale Study for Pure Painting 6, 2016 Acrylic on museum board mounted to board Artwork size - 8 x 6.5 inches Framed Size - 16 x 20 inches signed and dated on recto Lee We...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Gray Scale Study for Pure Painting 7
By Lee Wells
Located in New York, NY
Gray Scale Study for Pure Painting 7, 2016 Acrylic on museum board mounted to board Artwork size - 8 x 6.5 inches Framed Size - 16 x 20 inches signed and dated on recto Lee We...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Expressionist Abstract Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Gray Scale Study for Pure Painting 9
By Lee Wells
Located in New York, NY
Gray Scale Study for Pure Painting 9, 2016 Acrylic on museum board mounted to board Artwork size - 8 x 6.5 inches Framed Size - 16 x 20 inches signed and dated on recto Lee We...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Vectors Array
By Vargas-Suarez Universal
Located in New York, NY
Vectors Array (2014) oil enamel on polypropylene canvas 54 x 48 inches
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Enamel

Expedition 36 Russian EVA 35. 5Hrs. 58 Mins.
By Vargas-Suarez Universal
Located in New York, NY
Expedition 36 Russian EVA 35. 5Hrs. 58 Mins. (2013) oil enamel on polypropylene canvas 48 x 48 inches (122 x 122 cm)
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Enamel

Expedition 36 Russian EVA 34. 7Hrs. 29 Mins.
By Vargas-Suarez Universal
Located in New York, NY
Expedition 36 Russian EVA 34. 7Hrs. 29 Mins. (2013) oil enamel on polypropylene canvas 60 x 48 inches (152 x 122 cm)
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Enamel

Cellular 1 13
By Antonia Papatzanaki
Located in New York, NY
Cellular 1 13, 2015 Print on archival paper 80 X 80 centimeters, 31 X 31 inches Edition of 10 New York based, Antonia Papatzanaki is a renowned international artist from Greec...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Expressionist Abstract Prints

Materials

Archival Pigment

Vector Hardware Panel II
By Vargas-Suarez Universal
Located in New York, NY
Vector Hardware Panel II, 2015 oil enamel on honeycomb aircraft aluminum panel 60 x 60 inches Rafael Vargas-Suarez (born 1972), more commonly known as Vargas-Suarez Universal, is a contemporary artist living and working in Brooklyn, New York. Born in Mexico City, Vargas-Suarez was raised in the Houston suburb of Clear Lake City, adjacent to the Johnson Space Center. From 1991 to 1996 he studied astronomy and art history at the University of Texas at Austin[citation needed] and moved to New York City in 1997. He is primarily known for large-scale wall drawings, paintings, drawings, and photographs that draw inspiration from architecture, astronomy, biology, and medicine. His work has been or is currently featured in numerous exhibits, such as the Hudson River Museum in Yonkers, New York, the Jersey City Museum in Jersey City, New Jersey, the Thomas Erben Gallery in New York City, the Galeria Ramis...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Aluminum, Enamel

Vectorscape I
By Vargas-Suarez Universal
Located in New York, NY
Vectorscape I, 2015 oil, oil enamel and acrylic enamel on wood panels 10 x 20 feet (in 12 parts) Rafael Vargas-Suarez (born 1972), more commonly known as Vargas-Suarez Universal, is a contemporary artist living and working in Brooklyn, New York. Born in Mexico City, Vargas-Suarez was raised in the Houston suburb of Clear Lake City, adjacent to the Johnson Space Center. From 1991 to 1996 he studied astronomy and art history at the University of Texas at Austin[citation needed] and moved to New York City in 1997. He is primarily known for large-scale wall drawings, paintings, drawings, and photographs that draw inspiration from architecture, astronomy, biology, and medicine. His work has been or is currently featured in numerous exhibits, such as the Hudson River Museum in Yonkers, New York, the Jersey City Museum in Jersey City, New Jersey, the Thomas Erben Gallery in New York City, the Galeria Ramis...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Enamel

Virus Americanus XII
By Vargas-Suarez Universal
Located in New York, NY
Virus Americanus XII, 2002 oil enamel on canvas 150 x 128 inches
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Enamel

Vector Assembly Sequence II
By Vargas-Suarez Universal
Located in New York, NY
Vector Assembly Sequence II (2015) oil enamel on canvas 77 x 79 inches (195 x 200 cm)
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Enamel

Vector Group
By Vargas-Suarez Universal
Located in New York, NY
Vector Group (2015) oil enamel on canvas 24 x 20 inches
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Geometric Abstract Paintings

Materials

Enamel

BLUE JAY WAY
By Christina McPhee
Located in New York, NY
BLUE JAY WAY, 2012 ink and graphite on Arches cold press paper 44.5 x 75 inches / 1130 x 1905 mm  unframed Christina McPhee’s expansive abstract paintings, drawings, photographs, and videos test or query how can we know, and who is we? Moving from within a matrix of measurement, observation and contingent effects, her work resists characterization as product, and continually accesses fields outside itself. For her, process equals trial. Her work emulates potential forms of life, in various systems and territories, from a perspective of the non-self– a world beyond identity. McPhee’s dynamic, performative, physical engagement with materials, in both her analogue and digital works, is a seduction into surface-skidding calligraphic gestures and mark-making. The tactics of living are in subterfuge, like the ‘dazzle ships...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Archival Ink, Archival Paper, Graphite

Illumetric: Rectangle
By Shana Mabari
Located in New York, NY
Illumetric: Rectangle, 2014 Acrylic, Steel, LED lighting 3 x 2 x 10 feet (91 x 61 x 305 cm) Edition of 3 Shana Mabari is a Los Angeles-based artist exploring the intersections ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Sculptures

Materials

Steel

Untitled #3
By Kathy Grayson
Located in New York, NY
Kathy Grayson explores how day-to-day transitions from analog to digital media affect traditional painting. Fascinated by the transformations of meaning that occur when pictorial tec...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Paintings

Materials

Oil

Untitled (Self Portrait #3)
By Brian Gormley
Located in New York, NY
Untitled (Self Portrait #3)
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Portrait Paintings

Materials

Acrylic Polymer

Unttled (Portrait #1)
By Brian Gormley
Located in New York, NY
Unttled (Portrait #1)
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Expressionist Portrait Paintings

Materials

Acrylic Polymer

Untitled (abstraction with green)
By Brian Gormley
Located in New York, NY
Untitled (abstraction with green)
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Expressionist Animal Paintings

Materials

Acrylic Polymer

Untitled (triple self portrait)
By Brian Gormley
Located in New York, NY
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Figurative Paintings

Materials

Acrylic Polymer

Subtractive Sonica Whispers
By Marjan Moghaddam
Located in New York, NY
Subtractive Sonica Whispers
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Abstract Prints

Materials

Archival Pigment

Recently Viewed

View All