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Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Art Dealers Association of America (ADAA)
Art Dealers Association of America (ADAA)
Founded in 1962, the Art Dealers Association of America is a vetted community of more than 180 top-tier galleries across the United States. Working with these member galleries, ADAA appraisers offer assessment services for artworks spanning from the Renaissance to the present day. The ADAA also arranges public forums on important art-related topics and hosts The Art Show, presented each year at New York’s Park Avenue Armory, which stands out among art fairs for its acclaimed selection of curated booths — many of which are one-artist exhibitions.
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Elm Along The Bayou
By Beth Secor
Located in Houston, TX
Beth Secor, Elm Along The Bayou, 2014-2015 Ink, gouache and pencil on paper overall diptych 20 x 28 inches 20 x 14 inches each Beth Secor understands tr...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Archival Paper, Gouache, Ink

Untitled (Sunset with Hands)
By Louisa Chase
Located in New York, NY
Signed (at lower right): Louisa Chase
Category

Late 20th Century American Modern Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Ink, Watercolor

Two Wood Ducks on a Flowering Branch
By Joseph Stella
Located in New York, NY
Joseph Stella was a visionary artist who painted what he saw, an idiosyncratic and individual experience of his time and place. Stella arrived in New York in 1896, part of a wave of Italian immigrants from poverty-stricken Southern Italy. But Stella was not a child of poverty. His father was a notary and respected citizen in Muro Locano, a small town in the southern Appenines. The five Stella brothers were all properly educated in Naples. Stella’s older brother, Antonio, was the first of the family to come to America. Antonio Stella trained as a physician in Italy, and was a successful and respected doctor in the Italian community centered in Greenwich Village. He sponsored and supported his younger brother, Joseph, first sending him to medical school in New York, then to study pharmacology, and then sustaining him through the early days of his artistic career. Antonio Stella specialized in the treatment of tuberculosis and was active in social reform circles. His connections were instrumental in Joseph Stella’s early commissions for illustrations in reform journals. Joseph Stella, from the beginning, was an outsider. He was of the Italian-American community, but did not share its overwhelming poverty and general lack of education. He went back to Italy on several occasions, but was no longer an Italian. His art incorporated many influences. At various times his work echoed the concerns and techniques of the so-called Ashcan School, of New York Dada, of Futurism and, of Cubism, among others. These are all legitimate influences, but Stella never totally committed himself to any group. He was a convivial, but ultimately solitary figure, with a lifelong mistrust of any authority external to his own personal mandate. He was in Europe during the time that Alfred Stieglitz established his 291 Gallery. When Stella returned he joined the international coterie of artists who gathered at the West Side apartment of the art patron Conrad Arensberg. It was here that Stella became close friends with Marcel Duchamp. Stella was nineteen when he arrived in America and studied in the early years of the century at the Art Students League, and with William Merritt Chase, under whose tutelage he received rigorous training as a draftsman. His love of line, and his mastery of its techniques, is apparent early in his career in the illustrations he made for various social reform journals. Stella, whose later work as a colorist is breathtakingly lush, never felt obliged to choose between line and color. He drew throughout his career, and unlike other modernists, whose work evolved inexorably to more and more abstract form, Stella freely reverted to earlier realist modes of representation whenever it suited him. This was because, in fact, his “realist” work was not “true to nature,” but true to Stella’s own unique interpretation. Stella began to draw flowers, vegetables, butterflies, and birds in 1919, after he had finished the Brooklyn Bridge series of paintings, which are probably his best-known works. These drawings of flora and fauna were initially coincidental with his fantastical, nostalgic and spiritual vision of his native Italy which he called Tree of My Life (Mr. and Mrs. Barney A. Ebsworth Foundation and Windsor, Inc., St. Louis, illus. in Barbara Haskell, Joseph Stella, exh. cat. [New York: Whitney Museum of American Art, 1994], p. 111 no. 133). Two Wood Ducks...
Category

20th Century American Modern Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Color Pencil

African Agapanthus, or Blue Lily, a native of the Cape
By Frances Jauncey Ketchum
Located in New York, NY
Signed (at lower right): FJK
Category

Early 19th Century American Realist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Watercolor

Bitter Quassia, a native of Surinam
By Frances Jauncey Ketchum
Located in New York, NY
Signed (at lower right): FJK
Category

Early 19th Century American Realist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Watercolor

Switch-It #7
By Robert Ruello
Located in Houston, TX
Robert Ruello Switch-It #7, 2016 graphite, watercolor, and colored pencil on paper 20 x 15 inches Energetic and charged with visual power, the Switch-It series is movement and transition visualized. Ruello’s formal investigation of how we move through and disrupt various environments (digital, analog, and in-between) is rendered through these graphic elements. As he notes, “As a result of this disruption, the array is no longer stable or predictable — visual illusions and shifting figure/ground relationships begin to emerge.” Ruello’s work stems from an enjoyment in the tension between the stable and the unpredictable. Though not figural, his work presents elements that are recognizable from our visual vernacular. Digital screens, popular science...
Category

2010s Abstract Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Watercolor, Archival Paper, Color Pencil, Graphite

Switch-It #9
By Robert Ruello
Located in Houston, TX
Robert Ruello Switch-It #9, 2016 graphite, watercolor, and colored pencil on paper 20 x 15 inches Energetic and charged with visual power, the Switch-It series is movement and transition visualized. Ruello’s formal investigation of how we move through and disrupt various environments (digital, analog, and in-between) is rendered through these graphic elements. As he notes, “As a result of this disruption, the array is no longer stable or predictable — visual illusions and shifting figure/ground relationships begin to emerge.” Ruello’s work stems from an enjoyment in the tension between the stable and the unpredictable. Though not figural, his work presents elements that are recognizable from our visual vernacular. Digital screens, popular science...
Category

2010s Abstract Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Watercolor, Archival Paper, Color Pencil, Graphite

Untitled [Black Forms]
Located in New York, NY
Marker on paper
Category

Late 20th Century Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Permanent Marker

Untitled [Open Mouthed Dragon]
Located in New York, NY
Ink, colored marker on paper
Category

Late 20th Century Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Ink, Permanent Marker

Still Life
Located in New York, NY
Signed (at lower right): Bailey 1977
Category

Late 20th Century Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Pencil

Tourists Viewing the Temple of Karnak, Egypt
By Eleanor Parke Custis
Located in New York, NY
Eleanor Park Custis painted scenes as varied as the artist's travels: from her hometown of Washington, D.C., to the coastal towns of New England; from the prosperous fishing villages of Brittany, to Venice and the mountain villages and lakes of northern Italy. While Custis's subjects are diverse, her style is consistent and distinctive throughout this body of work. Her use of flat areas of color delineated by dark contours is reminiscent of the aesthetics of woodblock printing. Like many artists of the day, she was profoundly influenced by Japanese woodblock prints, and her adaptation of the aesthetic by 1924 led to her most productive artistic period. Eleanor Custis hailed from a socially prominent Washington, D.C., family. She was distantly related to Martha Custis Washington, America's first First Lady. Custis began three years of formal art training in the autumn of 1915 at the Corcoran School of Art in Washington, and was guided and inspired by Impressionist artist Edmund C. Tarbell, one of the Ten American Painters, who became the Corcoran School's principal in 1918. Custis exhibited widely in many of the Washington art societies and clubs for much of her career. She was also a frequent exhibitor at the Grand Central Art Galleries in New York City; her last one-woman show there was in April 1945. Custis's mature style emerged in scenes of the streets, wharves, and drydocks of seacoast villages from Maine to Massachusetts, which she visited during the summers of 1924 and 1925. She was working in Gloucester, Massachusetts in August 1924, and painted several gouaches of the town's wharves and winding streets, including In Gloucester Harbor and At the Drydock, Gloucester. During her stay, Custis may have met Jane Peterson or at least must have seen her work, the best of which was executed in Gloucester during the preceding ten years. The similarity between their styles is unmistakable, but, while it may be tempting to suggest that Custis was influenced by Peterson during her summer in Gloucester, the connection between their work is probably more a case of shared aesthetics and common European influences. Custis expanded her subject repertoire with three trips to Europe between 1926 and 1929, and was inspired by the Old World charm of Holland, northern France, Switzerland, and Italy, leading to such works as New Kirk, Delft, Holland, Market Day in Quimper, At the Foot of the Matterhorn, and The Town Square, Varenna. A Mediterranean cruise in 1934 introduced her to the Near East, and the bustling, colorful streets and bazaars of Cairo, captured in works like A Street in Cairo, Egypt and A Moroccan Jug...
Category

20th Century American Realist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Gouache

Pot Creek, NM, Summer
By Jane K. Starks
Located in Dallas, TX
The paper size is 30 1/8 x 44 inches
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Gouache, Paper

Untitled (Interior)
By Allison Gildersleeve
Located in Dallas, TX
"Behind my canvases, collages, and drawings lies a singular proposition: places are not inert; they are repositories for all that passes through them. My work is an inquiry into the ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Ink, Acrylic

Untitled
By Allison Gildersleeve
Located in Dallas, TX
"Behind my canvases, collages, and drawings lies a singular proposition: places are not inert; they are repositories for all that passes through them. My work is an inquiry into the ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Ink, Acrylic

Garden Flowers
By Charles Demuth
Located in New York, NY
Charles Demuth was one of the most complex, talented, and deeply sensitive artists of the American modern period. Whether he was painting floral still lifes, industrial landscapes, or Turkish bathhouses, art was, for Demuth, fraught with personal meaning. A fixture of the vanguard art scene in New York, Demuth navigated the currents of Modernism, producing some of the most exquisite watercolors and original oil paintings in twentieth-century American art. Demuth was born in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, the only child of a well-to-do family. He had an awkward and introverted childhood shaped by a childhood illness, Perthes, a disease of the hip that not only left him permanently lame, but, as part of the “cure,” bedridden for two years in the care of his mother. This long period of incapacitation had a deep impact on Demuth, who came to see himself as an invalid, an outsider who was different from everyone else. It was perhaps during this period of indoor confinement that his keen interest in art developed. Several relatives on his father’s side had been amateur artists, and, following his convalescence, his mother encouraged his artistic pursuits by sending him to a local painter for instruction. The majority of his early pictures are of flowers, a subject for which Demuth maintained a lifelong passion. Following high school, Demuth enrolled at the Drexel Institute of Art in Philadelphia, a school renowned for its commercial arts program. He advanced through the program rapidly, and, in 1905, at the encouragement of his instructors, he began taking courses at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. The two leading teachers then at the Academy were William Merritt Chase and Thomas Anshutz. Anshutz, himself a former student of Thomas Eakins, was well liked by his students, and is best known as the teacher of Robert Henri, John Sloan, and several of the other artists of the Ashcan School. Demuth, too, adopted a similar idiom, working in a controlled, realistic manner while at the Academy, where he remained until 1910. In 1907, Demuth made his first trip to Europe, staying in Paris. He spent time on the periphery of the art scene composed of the numerous American artists there, including John Marin and Edward Steichen. He returned to Philadelphia five months later, and immediately resumed courses at the Academy. Despite his introduction to advanced modern styles in Europe, Demuth’s work of this period retains the academic style he practiced before the trip. It wasn’t until he had summered at New Hope, Pennsylvania, in 1908 and 1911, that his style began to evolve. New Hope was a prominent American Impressionist art colony whose members were largely affiliated with the Pennsylvania Academy. Demuth dropped the conservative tone of his style and adopted a freer and more colorful palette. Although he remained based in Philadelphia, Demuth frequently went to New York during this period. Many of the same American artists of the Parisian art scene Demuth had encountered on his earlier European trip now formed the nucleus of New York’s avant-garde, which centered around Alfred Stieglitz’s 291 gallery. It wasn’t long before Demuth began to apply modernist-inspired strategies to his work. He was particularly influenced by the watercolor work of John Marin, also a former student of Anshutz, whose bold use of color in the medium Demuth freely adapted into looser washes of color. In 1912, Demuth again left for Paris, this time studying in the Académie Moderne, Académie Colorossi, and Académie Julian. In Paris Demuth met the American modernist Marsden Hartley. Hartley, a principal figure in the expatriate art circle, acted as a mentor to Demuth, and introduced him to the wide array of modern styles currently practiced in Europe. Hartley also introduced Demuth to many of the members of the Parisian avant-garde, including Gertrude Stein. Demuth was an aspiring writer, and he spent many hours in conversation with Stein. He wrote extensively during this period, and published two works shortly after his return to America. He also developed an interest in illustrating scenes from literary texts. From 1914 to 1919, Demuth produced a series of watercolors of scenes from books such as Emile Zola’s Nana and Henry James’s The Turn of the Screw. Upon his return to America, Demuth settled in New York. In 1914, Demuth had his first one-man show at Charles Daniel’s gallery, which promoted emerging modern American artists, including Man Ray, Rockwell Kent, Yasuo Kuniyoshi, Stuart Davis, and Max Weber. Demuth drew closer to the artistic vanguard in New York, becoming friends with many in the Stieglitz and Daniel circles, including Georgia O’Keeffe, Marcel Duchamp, Carl Van Vechten, and Edward Fiske. New York’s cosmopolitan atmosphere and active nightlife appealed greatly to Demuth. In a sketchy style well suited to watercolor, he painted many vaudeville and circus themes, as well as nightclub, café, and bathhouse scenes. Often with Duchamp, Demuth took part in an urban subculture replete with nightclubs, bars, drugs, and sexual permissiveness, which, for a homosexual artist like himself, allowed room for previously unattainable personal expression. Demuth’s pictures of sailors, bathhouses, and circus performers embody a sensual and sexual undercurrent, expressing the artist’s sense of comfort and belonging in the bohemian subculture of New York. Simultaneously, Demuth deepened his interest in floral pictures, painting these almost exclusively in watercolor. His style evolved from the broad color washes of his earlier pictures to more spare, flattened, and sinuous compositions, inspired by the drawings of Aubrey Beardsley and other artists of the Aesthetic Movement. Demuth’s flower watercolors are moody and atmospheric, sensuous and elegant, introspective and yet full of expressive power. Moreover they are beautiful, and are unequivocally among the finest still lifes in American art. Despite numerous subsequent artistic undertakings that led him in a variety of directions, Demuth never stopped painting flower pictures, ultimately adding fruits and other still-life objects to his repertoire. In 1916, Demuth began to develop a style later known as Precisionism, a form of landscape painting infused with Cubism, in which space is divided into precisely drawn geometric regions of color. Demuth first began to paint the landscape in an appropriated Cubist mode while on a trip with Hartley to Bermuda. In these early landscapes, in which the curvilinear forms of trees intersect the geometrically articulated architectural forms, Demuth explored ideas that shaped the future development of modernism in America. The full realization of Demuth’s explorations came after his return to America in 1917, when he turned his attention to industrial subjects. These works derive from a “machine aesthetic,” espoused by New York artists such as Francis Picabia, Joseph Stella, Albert Gleizes, and Duchamp, by which artists viewed machines as embodying mystical, almost religious significance as symbols of the modern world. Rather than painting the skyscrapers and bridges of New York as did most of his like-minded contemporaries, Demuth returned to his home town of Lancaster, where he painted factories and warehouses in a Precisionist idiom. The titles for these pictures are often contain literary references, which serve as clues for the viewer to aid in the decoding of the artist’s meaning. In 1923, Demuth planned a series of abstract “poster portraits” of his friends and contemporaries in the New York art and literary scene. In these “portraits,” Demuth combined text and symbolic elements to evoke the essential nature of his sitters’ distinguishing characteristics. In this fashion, he painted portraits of such artists as Georgia O’Keeffe, John Marin, and Arthur Dove. His most famous poster portrait, I Saw the Figure 5 in Gold...
Category

20th Century American Modern Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Watercolor

Hemlock--Selden's Neck, Lyme, Connecticut
By Charles De Wolf Brownell
Located in New York, NY
Framed, 5.25 x 8.5 x 1.5 in.
Category

19th Century American Realist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Watercolor

Untitled (Sunset Tower Hotel)
By Ed Templeton
Located in New York, NY
Listing includes framing with UV plexi, free shipping and a 14 day return policy. Ed Templeton Untitled (Sunset Tower Hotel), 2019 Image size: 11 ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Acrylic, Ballpoint Pen, Pencil, Color Pencil

Untitled (The Beverly Hills Hotel), 2019
By Ed Templeton
Located in New York, NY
Listing includes framing with UV plexi, free shipping in the continental US, and a 14-day return policy. Ed Templeton Untitled (The Beverly Hills Hotel...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Flowers for Mary #5
By Gail Norfleet
Located in Dallas, TX
Gail Norfleet earned her BFA at The University of Texas at Austin, and her MFA at Southern Methodist University. She has had solo exhibitions at The McKinney Avenue Contemporary and ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

India Ink, Acrylic, Illustration Board

Untitled (Sunset Tower Hotel), 2019
By Ed Templeton
Located in New York, NY
Framing included in listing, free shipping in the US, 14-day return policy. Ed Templeton Untitled (Sunset Tower Hotel), 2019 11 x 8.5 inches Acryli...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Untitled (The Road to Swindon)
By Colin Hunt
Located in New York, NY
Colin Hunt (b. 1973) is a Brooklyn, NY-based artist working primarily in egg tempera and watercolor. His recent series of landscapes of the Avebury stone circle outside of London are...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Photorealist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Watercolor

UNTITLED (lake)
By Deborah Cornell
Located in New York, NY
pastel drawing on paper of a lake with trees in brown frame
Category

1980s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Pastel, Archival Paper

Untitled
By Francis Chapin
Located in Dallas, TX
Francis Chapin was one of the most celebrated painters in Chicago during his lifetime. When he was a young art student, Valley House founder, Donald Vogel, painted with "Chape" on th...
Category

Mid-20th Century American Modern Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Watercolor

Stiff Life of Peaches, Plums, and Grapes
By William Hough
Located in New York, NY
The Victorian still-life painter William Hough began his career working in Coventry and later moved to London. He exhibited flower and fruit still lifes at the Royal Academy and at t...
Category

Late 19th Century Realist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Watercolor

PLUM ISLAND GRASS
By Deborah Cornell
Located in New York, NY
pastel on paper landscape brown wood frame
Category

1980s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Pastel

Untitled (Interior)
By Allison Gildersleeve
Located in Dallas, TX
"Behind my canvases, collages, and drawings lies a singular proposition: places are not inert; they are repositories for all that passes through them. My work is an inquiry into the ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Ink, Acrylic

Untitled (Interior)
By Allison Gildersleeve
Located in Dallas, TX
"Behind my canvases, collages, and drawings lies a singular proposition: places are not inert; they are repositories for all that passes through them. My work is an inquiry into the ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Ink, Acrylic

INKLING NO. 18
By Gregg Louis
Located in New York, NY
photograph of an imaginary creature called an INKLING. Edition of 1/8
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Inkjet

Flowers for Mary #1
By Gail Norfleet
Located in Dallas, TX
Gail Norfleet earned her BFA at The University of Texas at Austin, and her MFA at Southern Methodist University. She has had solo exhibitions at The McKinney Avenue Contemporary and ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Illustration Board, Paper, India Ink

Interior of Kitchen and View of the Ocean
By Bruce Cohen
Located in San Francisco, CA
Bruce Cohen is known for engaging his viewers with intriguing interiors in his distinctive, crisp, realist style. Influenced by Dutch still-life painting and Surrealism he orchestrat...
Category

2010s Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Pastel

Tribute to Morandi #30
By Bob Stuth-Wade
Located in Dallas, TX
Bob Stuth-Wade: Tribute to Morandi, 2018 "Life is what happens while I'm thinking of something else." "Driving. Listening to the radio. Talking on the phone. Thinking of where I'm ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Ink, Watercolor

Euclid Avenue, Cleveland
By Lawrence Edwin Blazey
Located in New York, NY
Cleveland-born painter, advertising artist, and industrial designer Lawrence Blazey received his professional training at the Cleveland School of Art (now the Cleveland Institute). I...
Category

Mid-20th Century American Modern Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Ink, Pencil

Tree and Fence, East Hartford, Connecticut (New England Landscape)
By Charles De Wolf Brownell
Located in New York, NY
Watercolor and gouache on paper
Category

Mid-19th Century American Realist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Watercolor, Gouache

Untitled (Boat Repair)
By Francis Chapin
Located in Dallas, TX
Francis Chapin was one of the most celebrated painters in Chicago during his lifetime. When he was a young art student, Valley House founder, Donald Vogel, painted with "Chape" on th...
Category

1940s American Modern Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Watercolor

Figural Studies
By Thomas Sully
Located in New York, NY
Pen and ink on tan laid paper
Category

19th Century American Realist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Ink, Laid Paper

Interior with Daffodils and Blue Chair
By Bruce Cohen
Located in San Francisco, CA
Bruce Cohen is known for engaging his viewers with intriguing interiors in his distinctive, crisp, realist style. Influenced by Dutch still-life painting and Surrealism he orchestrat...
Category

2010s Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Pastel

Tribute to Morandi #29
By Bob Stuth-Wade
Located in Dallas, TX
Bob Stuth-Wade: Tribute to Morandi, 2018 "Life is what happens while I'm thinking of something else." "Driving. Listening to the radio. Talking on the phone. Thinking of where I'm ...
Category

2010s American Modern Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Ink, Watercolor

Tribute to Morandi #31
By Bob Stuth-Wade
Located in Dallas, TX
Bob Stuth-Wade: Tribute to Morandi, 2018 "Life is what happens while I'm thinking of something else." "Driving. Listening to the radio. Talking on the phone. Thinking of where I'm ...
Category

2010s American Realist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Ink, Watercolor

Flox de Pascua-Magnolia (Tropical Trees & Plants)
By Charles De Wolf Brownell
Located in New York, NY
Watercolor on paper
Category

Mid-19th Century American Realist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Watercolor

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 Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Enamel

The Air We Breathe 1, Suite of 3
By Elizabeth Turk
Located in New York, NY
Suite of 3 drawings Charcoal and Getty Fire Ash on paper, 24 x 18 in (each)
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Charcoal

Untitled
By Louisa Chase
Located in New York, NY
Signed (at lower right): Louisa Chase
Category

Late 20th Century American Modern Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Charcoal, Ink, Watercolor, Pencil

Untitled
By Louisa Chase
Located in New York, NY
Signed (at lower right): Louisa Chase 1989
Category

Late 20th Century American Modern Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Charcoal, Ink, Watercolor, Pencil

Venice
By Jane Peterson
Located in New York, NY
Singed (at lower left): Jane Peterson
Category

Early 20th Century American Impressionist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Gouache

Profile of a Woman
By Elie Nadelman
Located in New York, NY
Pencil on paper
Category

Early 20th Century American Modern Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Pencil

Cormorant Drying Off
By Anne C. Weary
Located in Dallas, TX
“Anne Weary, who grew up as a Texas cowgirl, is at home in the outdoors and knows its ways and its language. There is a sort of very quiet but very powerful mysticism in her work, a ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Conté

The Air We Breathe 2, Suite of 5
By Elizabeth Turk
Located in New York, NY
Suite of 5 drawings Charcoal and Getty Fire Ash on paper, 24 x 18 in. (each)
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Charcoal

The Air We Breathe 5 and 6
By Elizabeth Turk
Located in New York, NY
Pair of drawings Charcoal and Getty Fire Ash on paper, 24 x 18 in. (each)
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Charcoal

Bandera Twin
By Anne C. Weary
Located in Dallas, TX
“Anne Weary, who grew up as a Texas cowgirl, is at home in the outdoors and knows its ways and its language. There is a sort of very quiet but very powerful mysticism in her work, a ...
Category

Early 2000s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Graphite

Corrected RC Site Plan, 1988/92
By James Turrell
Located in Houston, TX
James Turrell Corrected RC Site Plan, 1988/92 Ink on printed paper 35 x 45
Category

20th Century Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Felt Pen, Black and White

WHAT A GREAT JOKE
By Paton Miller
Located in New York, NY
charcoal drawing of a group of friends telling jokes on canvas.
Category

1980s Expressionist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Charcoal

Elements
By Philip Guston
Located in San Francisco, CA
Philip Guston was born in 1913 in Montreal, Canada. He began painting at the age of 12, and in 1927 he enrolled in the Los Angeles Manual Arts High School , where both he and Jackson...
Category

1970s Modern Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Lithograph

Untitled
By Charles Houghton Howard
Located in New York, NY
Charles Houghton Howard was born in Montclair, New Jersey, the third of five children in a cultured and educated family with roots going back to the Massachusetts Bay colony. His fat...
Category

20th Century American Modern Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Gouache, Graphite

Passaic Falls in New Jersey
By Nicolino V. Calyo
Located in New York, NY
Nicolino Calyo's career reflects a restless spirit of enterprise and adventure. Descended in the line of the Viscontes di Calyo of Calabria, the artist was the son of a Neapolitan army officer. (For a brief biographical sketch of the artist see Philadelphia Museum of Art, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia: Three Centuries of American Art, exhib. cat. [1976], pp. 299-301 no. 257.) Calyo received formal training in art at the Naples Academy. His career took shape amidst the backdrop of the political turbulence of early nineteenth-century Italy, Spain, and France. He fled Naples after choosing the losing side in struggles of 1820-21, and, by 1829, was part of a community of Italian exiles in Malta. This was the keynote of a peripatetic life that saw the artist travel through Europe, to America, to Europe again, and back to America. Paradoxically, Calyo’s stock-in-trade was close observation of people and places, meticulously rendered in the precise topographical tradition of his fellow countrymen, the eighteenth-century vedute painters Antonio Canale (called Canaletto) and Francesco Guardi. In search of artistic opportunity and in pursuit of a living, Calyo left Malta, and, by 1834, was in Baltimore, Maryland. He advertised his skills in the April 16, 1835 edition of the Baltimore American, offering "remarkable views executed from drawings taken on the spot by himself, . . . in which no pains or any resource of his art has been neglected, to render them accurate in every particular" (as quoted in The Art Gallery and The Gallery of the School of Architecture, University of Maryland, College Park, 350 Years of Art & Architecture in Maryland, exhib. cat. [1984], p. 35). Favoring gouache on paper as his medium, Calyo rendered faithful visual images of familiar locales executed with a degree of skill and polish that was second nature for European academically-trained artists. Indeed, it was the search for this graceful fluency that made American artists eager to travel to Europe and that led American patrons to seek out the works of ambitious newcomers. On June 16, 1835, the Baltimore Republican reported that Calyo was on his way north to Philadelphia and New York to paint views of those cities. Calyo arrived in New York, by way of Philadelphia, just in time for the great fire of December 1835, which destroyed much of the downtown business district. He sketched the fire as it burned, producing a series of gouaches that combined his sophisticated European painting style with the truth and urgency of on-the-spot observation. Two of his images were given broad currency when William James Bennett reproduced them in aquatint. The New-York Historical Society owns two large Calyo gouaches of the fire, and two others, formerly in the Middendorf Collection, are now in the collection of Hirschl & Adler Galleries. From 1838 until 1855, Calyo listed himself variously in the New York City directories as a painter, a portrait painter, and as an art instructor, singly, and in partnership with his sons, John (1818-1893) and later, the younger Hannibal (1835-1883). Calyo also attracted notice for a series of scenes and characters from the streets of New York, called Cries of New York. These works, which were later published as prints, participate in a time-honored European genre tradition. Calyo’s New York home became a gathering place for European exiles, including Napoleon III. Between 1847 and 1852 Calyo exhibited scenes from the Mexican War and traveled from Boston to New Orleans with his forty-foot panorama of the Connecticut River. Later, he spent time in Spain as court painter to Queen Maria Christina, the result of his continuing European connections, but he was back in America by 1874, where he remained until his death. The Passaic River rises in the hills just south of Morristown, New Jersey, marking a serpentine eighty-mile course before it empties into Newark Bay. It flows north-northeast to Paterson, where it falls seventy feet in a spectacular cataract before continuing south through Passaic and Newark. William Gerdts, in Painting and Sculpture in New Jersey (1964, pp. 51-2), describes the falls as: the most important [landscape] subject in New Jersey during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. . . . The Passaic Falls remained a popular spot, particularly during the romantic period. Indeed, newspapers, periodicals, and gift books contain many accounts of visits to the Falls, sentimental poems written about them or about a loved one visiting the Falls, or even, occasionally, in memory of one who perished in the waters of the Falls — usually intentionally. . . . Waterfalls . . . were popular among travelers in the period and the Passaic Falls were only surpassed by Niagara Falls and Trenton Falls...
Category

19th Century American Realist Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Paper, Gouache

Flowers for Mary #4
By Gail Norfleet
Located in Dallas, TX
Gail Norfleet earned her BFA at The University of Texas at Austin, and her MFA at Southern Methodist University. She has had solo exhibitions at The McKinney Avenue Contemporary and ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

India Ink, Acrylic, Illustration Board

Flowers for Mary #3
By Gail Norfleet
Located in Dallas, TX
Gail Norfleet earned her BFA at The University of Texas at Austin, and her MFA at Southern Methodist University. She has had solo exhibitions at The McKinney Avenue Contemporary and ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

India Ink, Acrylic, Illustration Board

Flowers for Mary #2
By Gail Norfleet
Located in Dallas, TX
Gail Norfleet earned her BFA at The University of Texas at Austin, and her MFA at Southern Methodist University. She has had solo exhibitions at The McKinney Avenue Contemporary and ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

India Ink, Acrylic, Illustration Board

West 74th Street
By Frederick Brosen
Located in New York, NY
A native New Yorker, Brosen has spent a lifetime wandering its streets, discovering its long history and witnessing its constant metamorphosis. The city is his muse and his primary s...
Category

2010s Contemporary Adaa Art Dealers Association Of America Drawings and Watercolor Paintings

Materials

Watercolor, Paper, Graphite

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