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Item Ships From: Canada
Little Black Dress - 6"x6", Giclée Print w/Hand Painted Embellishments
By Andrea Stajan-Ferkul
Located in Mississauga, Ontario
Homage to the little black dress. Chic and understated, this giclée print is enriched with added hand painted elements giving the print its own unique outcome. The special edition, o...
Category
2010s Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Nine Lives
By General Idea
Located in Toronto, Ontario
In 1967, General Idea was founded in Toronto by AA Bronson (b. 1946), Felix Partz (1945-1994), and Jorge Zontal (1944-1994). Over the course of 25 years, they made a significant cont...
Category
1980s Post-Modern Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Screen
Text - Solid Bass - 10/35 - colorful, calligraphic gestures, serigraph on paper
By Alice Teichert
Located in Bloomfield, ON
In a symphony of colour and form, Alice Teichert created more than 40 black ink and acrylic drawings on mylar which she transferred to silk screens. ‘The Text is Still Unwritten’ is ...
Category
Early 2000s Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Archival Ink, Archival Paper
Passion Over Reason
By General Idea
Located in Toronto, Ontario
In 1967, General Idea was founded in Toronto by AA Bronson (b. 1946), Felix Partz (1945-1994), and Jorge Zontal (1944-1994). Over 25 years, they made a significant contribution to postmodern and conceptual art in Canada and beyond.
The group was both prolific and multi-disciplinary long before it became de rigueur. They use photography, sculpture, painting, mail art, video, installation, multiples, and performance.
With their subversive approach and interest in parody and appropriation, General Idea addressed a broad range of social (and art-world) issues such as the cult of the artist, mass media, queer identity, and consumerism.
Thematic continuity was a key element in General Idea's work. Early on they introduced talismans or logos that they would revisit and re-envision, including skulls, ziggurats, and poodles.
This print comes from "Fear Management": a set of 8 prints...
Category
1980s Post-Modern Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Screen
Down the Drink
By General Idea
Located in Toronto, Ontario
In 1967, General Idea was founded in Toronto by AA Bronson (b. 1946), Felix Partz (1945-1994), and Jorge Zontal (1944-1994). Over the course of 25 years, they made a significant contribution to postmodern and conceptual art in Canada and beyond.
The group was both prolific and multi-disciplinary long before it became de rigueur. They with photography, sculpture, painting, mail art, video, installation, multiples, and performance. While the medium frequently changed, General Idea early introduced talismans or logos that they would revisit and re-envision, including skulls, ziggurats, and poodles.
(The EyeEye crest, for example, reappears in 1993 as a benefit print for the International Festival of Authors)
This print comes from "Fear Management": a set of 8 prints...
Category
1980s Post-Modern Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Screen
EYEYEYE
By General Idea
Located in Toronto, Ontario
In 1967, General Idea was founded in Toronto by AA Bronson (b. 1946), Felix Partz (1945-1994), and Jorge Zontal (1944-1994). Over the course of 25 years, they made a significant contribution to postmodern and conceptual art in Canada and beyond.
The group was both prolific and multi-disciplinary long before it became de rigueur. They with photography, sculpture, painting, mail art, video, installation, multiples, and performance. While the medium frequently changed, General Idea early introduced talismans or logos that they would revisit and re-envision, including skulls, ziggurats, and poodles.
(The EyeEye crest, for example, reappears in 1993 as a benefit print for the International Festival of Authors)
This print comes from "Fear Management": a set of 8 prints...
Category
1980s Post-Modern Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Screen
The Hand of the Spirit of Miss General Idea
By General Idea
Located in Toronto, Ontario
In 1967, General Idea was founded in Toronto by AA Bronson (b. 1946), Felix Partz (1945-1994), and Jorge Zontal (1944-1994). Over the course of 25 years, they made a significant contribution to postmodern and conceptual art in Canada and beyond.
The group was both prolific and multi-disciplinary long before it became de rigueur. They with photography, sculpture, painting, mail art, video, installation, multiples, and performance.
With their subversive approach and interest in parody and appropriation, General Idea addressed a broad range of social (and art-world) issues such as the cult of the artist, mass media, queer identity, and consumerism.
Thematic continuity was a key element in General Idea's work. Early on they introduced talismans or logos that they would revisit and re-envision, including skulls, ziggurats, and poodles. Perhaps one of the earliest of these icons is the pinching hand, or "Hand of the Spirit" which debuts around 1972 and appears frequently throughout the decade.
Centered on a hand-painted background, "The Hand of the Spirit of Miss General Idea" features a vibrant crest that displays a hand with fingers curled in a mystical gesture.
This print comes from "Fear Management": a set of 8 prints...
Category
1980s Post-Modern Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Screen
Dr. Brute's Shield
By General Idea
Located in Toronto, Ontario
In 1967, General Idea was founded in Toronto by AA Bronson (b. 1946), Felix Partz (1945-1994), and Jorge Zontal (1944-1994). Over the course of 25 years, they made a significant cont...
Category
1980s Post-Modern Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Screen
Cornucopia
By General Idea
Located in Toronto, Ontario
In 1967, General Idea was founded in Toronto by AA Bronson (b. 1946), Felix Partz (1945-1994), and Jorge Zontal (1944-1994). Over the course of 25 years, they made a significant contribution to postmodern and conceptual art in Canada and beyond.
The group was both prolific and multi-disciplinary long before it became de rigueur. They use photography, sculpture, painting, mail art, video, installation, multiples, and performance.
With their subversive approach and interest in parody and appropriation, General Idea addressed a broad range of social (and art-world) issues such as the cult of the artist, mass media, queer identity, and consumerism.
Thematic continuity was a key element in General Idea's work. Early on they introduced talismans or logos that they would revisit and re-envision, including skulls, ziggurats, and poodles.
This print comes from "Fear Management": a set of 8 prints...
Category
1980s Post-Modern Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Screen
The Honeymoon is Over
By General Idea
Located in Toronto, Ontario
In 1967, General Idea was founded in Toronto by AA Bronson (b. 1946), Felix Partz (1945-1994), and Jorge Zontal (1944-1994). Over the course of 25 years, they made a significant contribution to postmodern and conceptual art in Canada and beyond.
The group was both prolific and multi-disciplinary long before it became de rigueur. They with photography, sculpture, painting, mail art, video, installation, multiples, and performance.
With their subversive approach and interest in parody and appropriation, General Idea addressed a broad range of social (and art-world) issues such as the cult of the artist, mass media, queer identity, and consumerism.
Thematic continuity was a key element in General Idea's work. Early on they introduced talismans or logos that they would revisit and re-envision, including skulls, ziggurats, and poodles.
This print comes from "Fear Management": a set of 8 prints that celebrates some of General Idea's defining and most beloved motifs by situating them on a crest. This showcases their clever blend of historical fantasy and invented patrimony.
Many of these self-mythologizing crests debuted in 1986 during their exhibition at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo entitled: The Armoury of the 1984 Miss General Idea Pavillion.
This series is a defining example of one of General Idea's most iconic motifs, the crest, which showcases their clever blend of historical fantasy and invented patrimony.
Centered on a handpainted background, "The Honeymoon...
Category
1980s Post-Modern Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Screen
Ski Haus
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
32" x 20" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclée with Hand Embellishment of 100
Hand Signed by Todd White
Category
2010s Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
We Love To Drink
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
28" x 20.5" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclée with Hand Embellishment of 100
Hand Signed by Todd White
Category
2010s Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Nasty Habits
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
26" x 17.5" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclée with Hand Embellishment of 100
Hand Signed by Todd White
Category
2010s Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Intoxication At The Flower Lounge
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
23" x 32" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee on Canvas with Hand Embellishment of 195
Hand Signed by Todd White
Todd white captures restaurant, night and Hollywood scenes with contrasting colors serving the viewer’s eyes as those in his stolen scenes serve or are served-wine, coffee, cigarettes, cigars, and martinis. He creates timeless scenes of diverse attraction, of known intimacy. Within the exaggerated features and textured skin of his characters lies truth, yours and theirs. Distinctive bodies and details to lips, eyes, hair, skin, hands and what is held in each, separate and blend his characters’ lives. The smoke that rises from their lips, the drinks that linger at their fingertips, the clothing that adorns their bodies and the crowd created among lovers, friends, patrons and co-workers all speak a certain poetry. Each character depicts the subtleties of what one shows and what one hides. An asymmetrical face tells of an asymmetrical life, of how life wears and how we wear life — what we choose to carry in our hands and on our faces — how we wear ourselves, what smoke and color we stand in.
Todd’s paintings are captivating, demanding a second look, often invoking humor or thoughts of familiar feelings — I’ve been there, I know them. Above all, the work is infectious and has caught the attention of the public (galleries cannot keep enough of Todd’s work in stock) as well as celebrities (Vin Diesel, Hugh Hefner, Macaulay Culkin, Eric McCormack, Ryan Stiles and Joe Rogan are collectors of Todd’s oil paintings). But who is the artist behind the art and where did his unique style come from?
Todd began in at Warner Bros. Studios while working on the popular series, tiny toons. Through character clean-up and development, Todd began to forge his own artistic style. Shortly thereafter, Todd became part of the lead animation team for the internationally renowned cartoon, sponge bob square pants. Over the next three years, Todd sharpened his eye in storyboarding, illustration and character design.
Throughout this period, Todd privately experimented with style and concept, eventually arriving at a process which guides him through every piece. The impact is apparent in his paintings; Todd’s rat-pack-meets-Picasso style results, in part, from his desire to reveal his characters’ innermost thoughts and emotions on their faces. Todd likens his portraits to his favorite episode of the Twilight Zone in which people wore masks that later became their faces and revealed who they truly were.
Fast forward ten years later, and until Todd can conceptually see the story in his head, he refuses to paint a single signature knuckle curled around one of his famous martinis. "I actually name my pieces first and then i visualise each face and its personality. Then I develop each person’s story." The stark, unblemished delivery of his subjects is very much intended: whatever isn’t necessary to the story isn’t on my canvas. "I don’t waste a lot of time with backgrounds because they don’t interest me. They aren’t necessary. Instead i focus on what is essential. For example, the hands." Hands are a focal point for Todd, reflecting the subject’s state of mind as much as any body language or facial expression. Everyone’s hands are full of personality he surmises. Take Al Pacino; without his hands, he’s not nearly as interesting to watch.
In addition to more obvious influences, such as Austrian expressionist Egon...
Category
2010s Expressionist Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Canvas, Giclée
Devils in the Wine
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
22" x 32" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclée with Hand Embellishment of 100
Hand Signed by Todd White
Category
2010s Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
My Mouseketeer
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
24" x 20" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclée with Hand Embellishment of 100
Hand Signed by Todd White
Category
2010s Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Saints and Lords
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
21.5" x 40" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee on Canvas with Hand Embellishment of 135
Hand Signed by Todd White
Todd white captures restaurant, night and Hollywood scenes with contr...
Category
2010s Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Hands (Free As A Bird)
Located in Toronto, ON
Open Edition and Artist Proof Etching
Hand Signed by Zavi Lerman
2002
6.5" x 9" Unframed
Unique
6.5" x 9" Unframed
Artist Proof
Category
Early 2000s Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Etching
Nice Doin Business With Ya
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
31" x 30" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee on Canvas with Hand Embellishment of 25
Hand Signed by Todd White
Todd white captures restaurant, night and Hollywood scenes with contrasti...
Category
2010s Expressionist Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Charlie II
By Ronnie Wood
Located in Toronto, ON
14.5" x 11.5" Unframed
Limited Edition Serigraph on Paper of 185
Hand Signed by Ronnie Wood
1990
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Screen
Look
By John Lennon
Located in Toronto, ON
John Lennon original artwork. Limited Edition 14/300. Certified by Estate of John Lennon and Hand Signed by Yoko Ono. This is a drawing John Le...
Category
Late 20th Century Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Lithograph
The Vans
By Ronnie Wood
Located in Toronto, ON
19" x 16.5" Framed
Limited Edition Giclée
Numbered of 140
Hand Signed by Ronnie Wood
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Voodoo Ronnie
By Ronnie Wood
Located in Toronto, ON
25" x 19" Unframed
Limited Edition Screenprint of 295
Hand Signed by Ronnie Wood
1996
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Screen
Running Circles Around
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
18" x 10" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclée with Hand Embellishment of 135
Hand Signed by Todd White
“Do you know the old adage “running circles around you”? When you get one of thos...
Category
2010s Expressionist Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
What Price Tickets
By Ronnie Wood
Located in Toronto, ON
24" x 36" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee on Paper of 150
Hand Signed by Ronnie Wood
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Missy Elliott (Gold) (50 Years, Hip Hop, Rap, Iconic, Artist, Musician, Rapper)
By Agent X
Located in Kansas City, MO
Agent X
Missy Elliott (Gold) (50 Years, Hip Hop, Rap, Iconic, Artist, Musician, Rapper, Anniversary, Legend, Pop Art)
Archival Pigment Print with Archival Inks on 240 gsm Hahnemühle ...
Category
Early 2000s Pop Art Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Archival Paper, Digital
Life Imitates Art
By Mr. Brainwash
Located in Toronto, ON
36" x 36" Unframed
Limited Edition Screen Print on Archival Paper of 95
Hand Signed by Mr. Brainwash
2021
Category
2010s Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Archival Paper, Screen
Envy
By Plastic Jesus
Located in Toronto, ON
18" x 24" Unframed
Limited Edition Screen Print of 80
Hand Signed by Plastic Jesus
2020
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Screen
Electric Horses
By Ronnie Wood
Located in Toronto, ON
Image Size: 24" x 36" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee on Paper of 150
Hand Signed by Ronnie Wood
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
J Cole (Gold) (50 Years, Hip Hop, Rap, Iconic, Artist, Musician, Rapper)
By Agent X
Located in Kansas City, MO
Agent X
J Cole (Gold) (50 Years, Hip Hop, Rap, Iconic, Artist, Musician, Rapper, Anniversary, Legend, Pop Art)
Archival Pigment Print with Archival Inks on 240 ...
Category
Early 2000s Pop Art Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Archival Paper, Digital
Blue Smoke Keith
By Ronnie Wood
Located in Toronto, ON
40" x 26.5" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee on Canvas with Hand-Embellishment
Numbered of 125
Hand Signed by Ronnie Wood
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Canvas, Giclée
Colorful Keys
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
20" x 40" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee on Canvas
Hand Signed by Todd White
"A perfect example of White's interpretation of human expression and character is seen in Colorful keys...
Category
2010s Expressionist Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Once Upon A Time In The West
By Johnathan Ball
Located in Toronto, ON
18" x 26" Unframed
Limited Edition Print with Hand Embellishment of 50
Hand Signed by Johnathan Ball
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Midnight Snack
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
21" x 26" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee with Hand Embellishment
Hand Signed by Todd White
Todd white captures restaurant, night and Hollywood scenes with contrasting colors servi...
Category
2010s Expressionist Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Cosmopolitan (Small)
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
26.5" x 30" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee on Canvas
Hand Signed by Todd White
Todd white captures restaurant, night and Hollywood scenes with contrasting colors serving the viewer...
Category
Early 2000s Expressionist Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Canvas, Giclée
Lonzo Ball Pelicans (Signed by Lonzo Ball)
By Johnathan Ball
Located in Toronto, ON
20" x 16" Unframed
Limited Edition Print with Hand Embellishment of 25
Autographed by Lonzo Ball
Hand Signed by Johnathan Ball
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Lonzo Ball Lakers (Hand signed by Lonzo Ball)
By Johnathan Ball
Located in Toronto, ON
20" x 16" Unframed
Limited Edition Print with Hand Embellishment of 10
Autographed by Lonzo Ball
Hand Signed by Johnathan Ball
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Drawn to Life: Charlie
By Ronnie Wood
Located in Toronto, ON
26" x 24" Framed
Limited Edition Giclee
Numbered of 295
Hand Signed by Ronnie Wood
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Hendrix
By Ronnie Wood
Located in Toronto, ON
24 1/2" x 18 3/4" Unframed
Multi-block Wood on Somerset Banks Cream 300gsm
Hand Singed by Ronnie Wood
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Woodcut
Same Hell Different Devils
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
“This painting started off as a commentary on the dating world. No matter what age you’re at, starting out in your 20’s, going through life. If you get back out there in the 40’s it’...
Category
2010s Expressionist Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Street Connoisseur - Keep it Real (Red)
By Mr. Brainwash
Located in Toronto, ON
20" x 16" Unframed
Screen Print of 15
Hand Signed by Mr. Brainwash
2022
Category
2010s Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Screen
Leia
By Johnathan Ball
Located in Toronto, ON
18" x 30" Unframed
Unique with Hand Embellishment
Hand Signed by Johnathan Ball
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
The Hills
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
30" x 40" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee on Canvas with Hand Embellishment of 125
Hand Signed by Todd White
Todd white captures restaurant, night and Hollywood scenes with contras...
Category
2010s Expressionist Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
LeBron Dunk
By Johnathan Ball
Located in Toronto, ON
20" x 16" Unframed
Limited Edition Print with Hand Embellishment
Hand Signed by Johnathan Ball
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Artists Proof Electric Horses
By Ronnie Wood
Located in Toronto, ON
Image Size: 45" x 35.5" Unframed
Artist Proof Giclee on Paper of 15
Hand Signed by Ronnie Wood
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Cafe Mocha Jive
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
20" x 30" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee On Canvas
Hand Signed by Todd White
Todd white captures restaurant, night and Hollywood scenes with contrasting colors serving the viewer’s ...
Category
2010s Expressionist Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Canvas, Giclée
Eminem (Black & White)(50 Years, Hip Hop, Rap, Iconic, Artist, Musician, Rapper)
By Agent X
Located in Kansas City, MO
Agent X
Eminem (Black & White) (50 Years, Hip Hop, Rap, Iconic, Artist, Musician, Rapper, Anniversary, Legend, Pop Art)
Archival Pigment Print with Archival Inks on 240 gsm Hahnemühl...
Category
2010s Street Art Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Archival Paper, Digital
Dead Mans Hand
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
25" x 33" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee with Hand Embellishment of 75
Hand Signed by Todd White
Todd white captures restaurant, night and Hollywood scenes with contrasting colors ...
Category
2010s Expressionist Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Malibu High
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
20" x 30" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee with Hand Embellishment of 135
Hand Signed by Todd White
Todd white captures restaurant, night and Hollywood scenes with contrasting colors serving the viewer’s eyes as those in his stolen scenes serve or are served-wine, coffee, cigarettes, cigars, and martinis. He creates timeless scenes of diverse attraction, of known intimacy. Within the exaggerated features and textured skin of his characters lies truth, yours and theirs. Distinctive bodies and details to lips, eyes, hair, skin, hands and what is held in each, separate and blend his characters’ lives. The smoke that rises from their lips, the drinks that linger at their fingertips, the clothing that adorns their bodies and the crowd created among lovers, friends, patrons and co-workers all speak a certain poetry. Each character depicts the subtleties of what one shows and what one hides. An asymmetrical face tells of an asymmetrical life, of how life wears and how we wear life — what we choose to carry in our hands and on our faces — how we wear ourselves, what smoke and color we stand in.
Todd’s paintings are captivating, demanding a second look, often invoking humor or thoughts of familiar feelings — I’ve been there, I know them. Above all, the work is infectious and has caught the attention of the public (galleries cannot keep enough of Todd’s work in stock) as well as celebrities (Vin Diesel, Hugh Hefner, Macaulay Culkin, Eric McCormack, Ryan Stiles and Joe Rogan are collectors of Todd’s oil paintings). But who is the artist behind the art and where did his unique style come from?
Todd began in at Warner Bros. Studios while working on the popular series, tiny toons. Through character clean-up and development, Todd began to forge his own artistic style. Shortly thereafter, Todd became part of the lead animation team for the internationally renowned cartoon, sponge bob square pants. Over the next three years, Todd sharpened his eye in storyboarding, illustration and character design.
Throughout this period, Todd privately experimented with style and concept, eventually arriving at a process which guides him through every piece. The impact is apparent in his paintings; Todd’s rat-pack-meets-Picasso style results, in part, from his desire to reveal his characters’ innermost thoughts and emotions on their faces. Todd likens his portraits to his favorite episode of the Twilight Zone in which people wore masks that later became their faces and revealed who they truly were.
Fast forward ten years later, and until Todd can conceptually see the story in his head, he refuses to paint a single signature knuckle curled around one of his famous martinis. "I actually name my pieces first and then i visualise each face and its personality. Then I develop each person’s story." The stark, unblemished delivery of his subjects is very much intended: whatever isn’t necessary to the story isn’t on my canvas. "I don’t waste a lot of time with backgrounds because they don’t interest me. They aren’t necessary. Instead i focus on what is essential. For example, the hands." Hands are a focal point for Todd, reflecting the subject’s state of mind as much as any body language or facial expression. Everyone’s hands are full of personality he surmises. Take Al Pacino; without his hands, he’s not nearly as interesting to watch.
In addition to more obvious influences, such as Austrian expressionist Egon...
Category
2010s Expressionist Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Missy Elliott (Pink) (50 Years, Hip Hop, Rap, Iconic, Artist, Musician, Rapper)
By Agent X
Located in Kansas City, MO
Agent X
Missy Elliott (Pink) (50 Years, Hip Hop, Rap, Iconic, Artist, Musician, Rapper, Anniversary, Legend, Pop Art)
Archival Pigment Print with Archival Inks on 240 gsm Hahnemühle...
Category
Early 2000s Pop Art Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Archival Paper, Digital
Someones About to Get Hustled
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
22" x 32" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee with Hand Embellishment of 195
Hand Signed by Todd White
Todd white captures restaurant, night and Hollywood scenes with contrasting colors serving the viewer’s eyes as those in his stolen scenes serve or are served-wine, coffee, cigarettes, cigars, and martinis. He creates timeless scenes of diverse attraction, of known intimacy. Within the exaggerated features and textured skin of his characters lies truth, yours and theirs. Distinctive bodies and details to lips, eyes, hair, skin, hands and what is held in each, separate and blend his characters’ lives. The smoke that rises from their lips, the drinks that linger at their fingertips, the clothing that adorns their bodies and the crowd created among lovers, friends, patrons and co-workers all speak a certain poetry. Each character depicts the subtleties of what one shows and what one hides. An asymmetrical face tells of an asymmetrical life, of how life wears and how we wear life — what we choose to carry in our hands and on our faces — how we wear ourselves, what smoke and color we stand in.
Todd’s paintings are captivating, demanding a second look, often invoking humor or thoughts of familiar feelings — I’ve been there, I know them. Above all, the work is infectious and has caught the attention of the public (galleries cannot keep enough of Todd’s work in stock) as well as celebrities (Vin Diesel, Hugh Hefner, Macaulay Culkin, Eric McCormack, Ryan Stiles and Joe Rogan are collectors of Todd’s oil paintings). But who is the artist behind the art and where did his unique style come from?
Todd began in at Warner Bros. Studios while working on the popular series, tiny toons. Through character clean-up and development, Todd began to forge his own artistic style. Shortly thereafter, Todd became part of the lead animation team for the internationally renowned cartoon, sponge bob square pants. Over the next three years, Todd sharpened his eye in storyboarding, illustration and character design.
Throughout this period, Todd privately experimented with style and concept, eventually arriving at a process which guides him through every piece. The impact is apparent in his paintings; Todd’s rat-pack-meets-Picasso style results, in part, from his desire to reveal his characters’ innermost thoughts and emotions on their faces. Todd likens his portraits to his favorite episode of the Twilight Zone in which people wore masks that later became their faces and revealed who they truly were.
Fast forward ten years later, and until Todd can conceptually see the story in his head, he refuses to paint a single signature knuckle curled around one of his famous martinis. "I actually name my pieces first and then i visualise each face and its personality. Then I develop each person’s story." The stark, unblemished delivery of his subjects is very much intended: whatever isn’t necessary to the story isn’t on my canvas. "I don’t waste a lot of time with backgrounds because they don’t interest me. They aren’t necessary. Instead i focus on what is essential. For example, the hands." Hands are a focal point for Todd, reflecting the subject’s state of mind as much as any body language or facial expression. Everyone’s hands are full of personality he surmises. Take Al Pacino; without his hands, he’s not nearly as interesting to watch.
In addition to more obvious influences, such as Austrian expressionist Egon...
Category
2010s Expressionist Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Sweet Dreams
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
20" x 36" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee with Hand Embellishment of 135
Hand Signed by Todd White
Todd white captures restaurant, night and Hollywood scenes with contrasting colors...
Category
2010s Expressionist Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
My Brand New Pistol
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
18" x 20" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee on Canvas with Hand Embellishment of 75
Hand Signed by Todd White
Todd white captures restaurant, night and Hollywood scenes with contrasting colors serving the viewer’s eyes as those in his stolen scenes serve or are served-wine, coffee, cigarettes, cigars, and martinis. He creates timeless scenes of diverse attraction, of known intimacy. Within the exaggerated features and textured skin of his characters lies truth, yours and theirs. Distinctive bodies and details to lips, eyes, hair, skin, hands and what is held in each, separate and blend his characters’ lives. The smoke that rises from their lips, the drinks that linger at their fingertips, the clothing that adorns their bodies and the crowd created among lovers, friends, patrons and co-workers all speak a certain poetry. Each character depicts the subtleties of what one shows and what one hides. An asymmetrical face tells of an asymmetrical life, of how life wears and how we wear life — what we choose to carry in our hands and on our faces — how we wear ourselves, what smoke and color we stand in.
Todd’s paintings are captivating, demanding a second look, often invoking humor or thoughts of familiar feelings — I’ve been there, I know them. Above all, the work is infectious and has caught the attention of the public (galleries cannot keep enough of Todd’s work in stock) as well as celebrities (Vin Diesel, Hugh Hefner, Macaulay Culkin, Eric McCormack, Ryan Stiles and Joe Rogan are collectors of Todd’s oil paintings). But who is the artist behind the art and where did his unique style come from?
Todd began in at Warner Bros. Studios while working on the popular series, tiny toons. Through character clean-up and development, Todd began to forge his own artistic style. Shortly thereafter, Todd became part of the lead animation team for the internationally renowned cartoon, sponge bob square pants. Over the next three years, Todd sharpened his eye in storyboarding, illustration and character design.
Throughout this period, Todd privately experimented with style and concept, eventually arriving at a process which guides him through every piece. The impact is apparent in his paintings; Todd’s rat-pack-meets-Picasso style results, in part, from his desire to reveal his characters’ innermost thoughts and emotions on their faces. Todd likens his portraits to his favorite episode of the Twilight Zone in which people wore masks that later became their faces and revealed who they truly were.
Fast forward ten years later, and until Todd can conceptually see the story in his head, he refuses to paint a single signature knuckle curled around one of his famous martinis. "I actually name my pieces first and then i visualise each face and its personality. Then I develop each person’s story." The stark, unblemished delivery of his subjects is very much intended: whatever isn’t necessary to the story isn’t on my canvas. "I don’t waste a lot of time with backgrounds because they don’t interest me. They aren’t necessary. Instead i focus on what is essential. For example, the hands." Hands are a focal point for Todd, reflecting the subject’s state of mind as much as any body language or facial expression. Everyone’s hands are full of personality he surmises. Take Al Pacino; without his hands, he’s not nearly as interesting to watch.
In addition to more obvious influences, such as Austrian expressionist Egon...
Category
2010s Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Boa Constrictors
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
28" x 38" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee with Hand Embellishment of 135
Hand Signed by Todd White
Todd white captures restaurant, night and Hollywood scenes with contrasting colors...
Category
2010s Expressionist Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
Paint it Black - Pretty Beat Up (Richards and Flowers)
By Ronnie Wood
Located in Toronto, ON
28.5" x 38.5" Unframed
Limited Edition Silkscreen of 295
Hand Signed by Ronnie Wood
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Screen
Night At Nics (Small)
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
20" x 20" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee on Canvas of 200
Hand Signed by Todd White
Todd white captures restaurant, night and Hollywood scenes with contrasting colors serving the v...
Category
2010s Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
It’s Alright if You Love Me
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
40" x 16" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee on Canvas of 5
Hand Singed by Todd White
Todd white captures restaurant, night and Hollywood scenes with contrasting colors serving the vie...
Category
2010s Expressionist Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
She Gives Her Heart Away
By Todd White
Located in Toronto, ON
29" x 16.5" Unframed
Limited Edition Giclee with Hand Embellishment of 135
Hand Signed by Todd White
Todd white captures restaurant, night and Hollywood scenes with contrasting colors serving the viewer’s eyes as those in his stolen scenes serve or are served-wine, coffee, cigarettes, cigars, and martinis. He creates timeless scenes of diverse attraction, of known intimacy. Within the exaggerated features and textured skin of his characters lies truth, yours and theirs. Distinctive bodies and details to lips, eyes, hair, skin, hands and what is held in each, separate and blend his characters’ lives. The smoke that rises from their lips, the drinks that linger at their fingertips, the clothing that adorns their bodies and the crowd created among lovers, friends, patrons and co-workers all speak a certain poetry. Each character depicts the subtleties of what one shows and what one hides. An asymmetrical face tells of an asymmetrical life, of how life wears and how we wear life — what we choose to carry in our hands and on our faces — how we wear ourselves, what smoke and color we stand in.
Todd’s paintings are captivating, demanding a second look, often invoking humor or thoughts of familiar feelings — I’ve been there, I know them. Above all, the work is infectious and has caught the attention of the public (galleries cannot keep enough of Todd’s work in stock) as well as celebrities (Vin Diesel, Hugh Hefner, Macaulay Culkin, Eric McCormack, Ryan Stiles and Joe Rogan are collectors of Todd’s oil paintings). But who is the artist behind the art and where did his unique style come from?
Todd began in at Warner Bros. Studios while working on the popular series, tiny toons. Through character clean-up and development, Todd began to forge his own artistic style. Shortly thereafter, Todd became part of the lead animation team for the internationally renowned cartoon, sponge bob square pants. Over the next three years, Todd sharpened his eye in storyboarding, illustration and character design.
Throughout this period, Todd privately experimented with style and concept, eventually arriving at a process which guides him through every piece. The impact is apparent in his paintings; Todd’s rat-pack-meets-Picasso style results, in part, from his desire to reveal his characters’ innermost thoughts and emotions on their faces. Todd likens his portraits to his favorite episode of the Twilight Zone in which people wore masks that later became their faces and revealed who they truly were.
Fast forward ten years later, and until Todd can conceptually see the story in his head, he refuses to paint a single signature knuckle curled around one of his famous martinis. "I actually name my pieces first and then i visualise each face and its personality. Then I develop each person’s story." The stark, unblemished delivery of his subjects is very much intended: whatever isn’t necessary to the story isn’t on my canvas. "I don’t waste a lot of time with backgrounds because they don’t interest me. They aren’t necessary. Instead i focus on what is essential. For example, the hands." Hands are a focal point for Todd, reflecting the subject’s state of mind as much as any body language or facial expression. Everyone’s hands are full of personality he surmises. Take Al Pacino; without his hands, he’s not nearly as interesting to watch.
In addition to more obvious influences, such as Austrian expressionist Egon...
Category
2010s Expressionist Canada - Figurative Prints
Materials
Giclée
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