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2017 Ed Moses Painting

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  • Original Midcentury Abstract Painting
    By Vincent Cavallaro
    Located in Newport Beach, CA
    Signed and dated, acrylic on canvas painting by Italian-American artist, Vincent Cavallaro (1912-1985) who was honored in the with an award from the MoMA (War Poster, 1941), commissi...
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    Vintage 1960s American Paintings

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    Canvas, Acrylic

  • Original, 1985 Abstract Figurative Painting
    By Gisele Leclerc
    Located in Newport Beach, CA
    Richly colored, signed and dated, abstract figurative, acrylic-on-paper artwork by listed, Quebecois Expressionist painter, Gisele Leclerc (1931-2019). Her work appears in the presti...
    Category

    Vintage 1980s Canadian Contemporary Art

    Materials

    Acrylic, Paper

  • Midcentury, Pierre Fichet Abstract Painting
    By Pierre Fichet
    Located in Newport Beach, CA
    Signed, dated, 1959, oil-on-canvas painting by listed, well-exhibited, French, Lyrical Abstraction painter, Pierre Fichet (1927-2007). Select group exhibitions: Paris Biennale, Franc...
    Category

    Vintage 1950s French Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas

  • Chinoiserie Gouache on Silk Painting
    Located in Newport Beach, CA
    Chinoiserie gouache painting on silk of a village and figures. Silver gilt frame.
    Category

    Antique Early 19th Century English Chinoiserie Paintings

    Materials

    Silver Leaf

  • Antique Italian Oil Painting of a Family Tree
    Located in Newport Beach, CA
    Hand painted, oil paint on canvas of an Italian family tree featuring a male figure, crests and names, all in the design of a tree. Framed in an antique, hand-carved gilt-wood fram...
    Category

    Antique 18th Century Italian Baroque Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Giltwood, Paint

  • Italian Oil on Canvas Boiserie Room Painting
    Located in Newport Beach, CA
    Hand painted architectural painting from an 18th century boiserie room.
    Category

    Antique 18th Century Italian Baroque Paintings

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    Canvas, Wood, Paint

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  • Ed Moses Signed Limited Edition Screenprint "Ikuru Speak-No" 11/250, 1990
    By Ed Moses
    Located in Studio City, CA
    A wonderful and rivetting work by American/ California artist Ed Moses titled "Ikuru Speak-No". This work is on wove and Japanese paper (The print was made with two attached sheets...
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    1990s American Post-Modern Contemporary Art

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    Glass, Wood, Paper

  • Richard Hirsch Encaustic Painting of Nothing #53, 2017
    By Richard A. Hirsch
    Located in New York, NY
    Contemporary American ceramic artist Richard Hirsch's encaustic Painting of Nothing #53 is made of ceramic raw materials, dry pigment and wax. This piece is part of his ongoing Painting of Nothing Series. Hirsch applies the waxy mix with a brush onto redwood plywood backed structures with two-inch wood strips all around and used various torches to layer, flux, bubble and blend. "Waxy and very tactile, they are probably the work Mark Rothko would have done had he spent most of his life in clay. Hirsch’s paintings have the nuance, subtle texture, and color shifts that become evident in blown-up photographs of his ceramic objects as well as a similar presence." Signed and dated en verso by the artist. This painting ship directly from the artist’s studio in Rochester, NY. (Literature: "With Fire: Richard Hirsch, A Life Between Chance and Design", Scott Meyer (Author), RIT Cary Graphic Arts Press 2012 - "The Paintings" pgs. 102 - 105) Richard Hirsch brief bio: In the field of contemporary ceramic, Rick Hirsch has earned an international reputation. He has achieved this recognition by engaging in numerous diversified professional activities. Through efforts in university teaching, exhibits, writing, lecturing and researching he has risen to worldwide prominence. In 1975, Hirsch co-authored a book entitled Raku, published by Watson-Guptill. This was the first comprehensive text to address the new innovations developing in the west that were transforming traditional Japanese Raku. Also, in the same year, Hirsch became a founding faculty member of The Program in Artistry at Boston University. Currently, Hirsch is a Professor Emeritus at The School for American Crafts which is a part of Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, NY. His university teaching career now spans well over four decades. Repeatedly, Hirsch has participated in several milestone exhibitions and publications. Significant shows include; The Evolution of American Art in Craft Media Since 1945; Echoes: Historical References in Contemporary Ceramics; American Ceramics Now; Raku: Origins, Impact and Contemporary Expression; and Convergences: The Presence of the Past in Contemporary American Ceramics...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Contemporary Art

    Materials

    Clay, Organic Material

  • Richard Hirsch Encaustic Painting of Nothing #54, 2017
    By Richard A. Hirsch
    Located in New York, NY
    Contemporary American ceramic artist Richard Hirsch's encaustic Painting of Nothing #54 is made of ceramic raw materials, dry pigment and wax. This piece is part of his ongoing Paint...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Contemporary Art

    Materials

    Clay, Organic Material

  • Richard Hirsch Encaustic Painting of Nothing #50, 2017
    By Richard A. Hirsch
    Located in New York, NY
    Contemporary American ceramic artist Richard Hirsch's encaustic Painting of Nothing #50 is made of ceramic raw materials, dry pigment and wax. This piece is part of his ongoing Painting of Nothing Series. Hirsch applies the waxy mix with a brush onto redwood plywood backed structures with two-inch wood strips all around and used various torches to layer, flux, bubble and blend. "Waxy and very tactile, they are probably the work Mark Rothko would have done had he spent most of his life in clay. Hirsch’s paintings have the nuance, subtle texture, and color shifts that become evident in blown-up photographs of his ceramic objects as well as a similar presence." Signed and dated en verso by the artist. This painting ship directly from the artist’s studio in Rochester, NY. (Literature: "With Fire: Richard Hirsch, A Life Between Chance and Design", Scott Meyer (Author), RIT Cary Graphic Arts Press 2012 - "The Paintings" pgs. 102 - 105) Richard Hirsch brief bio: In the field of contemporary ceramic, Rick Hirsch has earned an international reputation. He has achieved this recognition by engaging in numerous diversified professional activities. Through efforts in university teaching, exhibits, writing, lecturing and researching he has risen to worldwide prominence. In 1975, Hirsch co-authored a book entitled Raku, published by Watson-Guptill. This was the first comprehensive text to address the new innovations developing in the west that were transforming traditional Japanese Raku. Also, in the same year, Hirsch became a founding faculty member of The Program in Artistry at Boston University. Currently, Hirsch is a Professor Emeritus at The School for American Crafts which is a part of Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, NY. His university teaching career now spans well over four decades. Repeatedly, Hirsch has participated in several milestone exhibitions and publications. Significant shows include; The Evolution of American Art in Craft Media Since 1945; Echoes: Historical References in Contemporary Ceramics; American Ceramics Now; Raku: Origins, Impact and Contemporary Expression; and Convergences: The Presence of the Past in Contemporary American Ceramics...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Contemporary Art

    Materials

    Clay, Organic Material

  • Richard Hirsch Encaustic Painting of Nothing #55, 2017
    By Richard A. Hirsch
    Located in New York, NY
    Contemporary American ceramic artist Richard Hirsch's encaustic Painting of Nothing #55 is made of ceramic raw materials, dry pigment and wax. This piece is part of his ongoing Painting of Nothing Series. Hirsch applies the waxy mix with a brush onto redwood plywood backed structures with two-inch wood strips all around and used various torches to layer, flux, bubble and blend. "Waxy and very tactile, they are probably the work Mark Rothko would have done had he spent most of his life in clay. Hirsch’s paintings have the nuance, subtle texture, and color shifts that become evident in blown-up photographs of his ceramic objects as well as a similar presence." Signed and dated en verso by the artist. This painting ship directly from the artist’s studio in Rochester, NY. (Literature: "With Fire: Richard Hirsch, A Life Between Chance and Design", Scott Meyer (Author), RIT Cary Graphic Arts Press 2012 - "The Paintings" pgs. 102 - 105) Richard Hirsch brief bio: In the field of contemporary ceramic, Rick Hirsch has earned an international reputation. He has achieved this recognition by engaging in numerous diversified professional activities. Through efforts in university teaching, exhibits, writing, lecturing and researching he has risen to worldwide prominence. In 1975, Hirsch co-authored a book entitled Raku, published by Watson-Guptill. This was the first comprehensive text to address the new innovations developing in the west that were transforming traditional Japanese Raku. Also, in the same year, Hirsch became a founding faculty member of The Program in Artistry at Boston University. Currently, Hirsch is a Professor Emeritus at The School for American Crafts which is a part of Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, NY. His university teaching career now spans well over four decades. Repeatedly, Hirsch has participated in several milestone exhibitions and publications. Significant shows include; The Evolution of American Art in Craft Media Since 1945; Echoes: Historical References in Contemporary Ceramics; American Ceramics...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Contemporary Art

    Materials

    Clay, Organic Material

  • Richard Hirsch Encaustic Painting of Nothing #52, 2017
    By Richard A. Hirsch
    Located in New York, NY
    Contemporary American ceramic artist Richard Hirsch's encaustic Painting of Nothing #52 is made of ceramic raw materials, dry pigment and wax. This piece is part of his ongoing Painting of Nothing Series. Hirsch applies the waxy mix with a brush onto redwood plywood backed structures with two-inch wood strips all around and used various torches to layer, flux, bubble and blend. "Waxy and very tactile, they are probably the work Mark Rothko would have done had he spent most of his life in clay. Hirsch’s paintings have the nuance, subtle texture, and color shifts that become evident in blown-up photographs of his ceramic objects as well as a similar presence." Signed and dated en verso by the artist. This painting ship directly from the artist’s studio in Rochester, NY. (Literature: "With Fire: Richard Hirsch, A Life Between Chance and Design", Scott Meyer (Author), RIT Cary Graphic Arts Press 2012 - "The Paintings" pgs. 102 - 105) Richard Hirsch brief bio: In the field of contemporary ceramic, Rick Hirsch has earned an international reputation. He has achieved this recognition by engaging in numerous diversified professional activities. Through efforts in university teaching, exhibits, writing, lecturing and researching he has risen to worldwide prominence. In 1975, Hirsch co-authored a book entitled Raku, published by Watson-Guptill. This was the first comprehensive text to address the new innovations developing in the west that were transforming traditional Japanese Raku. Also, in the same year, Hirsch became a founding faculty member of The Program in Artistry at Boston University. Currently, Hirsch is a Professor Emeritus at The School for American Crafts which is a part of Rochester Institute of Technology in Rochester, NY. His university teaching career now spans well over four decades. Repeatedly, Hirsch has participated in several milestone exhibitions and publications. Significant shows include; The Evolution of American Art in Craft Media Since 1945; Echoes: Historical References in Contemporary Ceramics; American Ceramics Now; Raku: Origins, Impact and Contemporary Expression; and Convergences: The Presence of the Past in Contemporary American Ceramics...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary American Modern Contemporary Art

    Materials

    Clay, Organic Material

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