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Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

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Item Ships From: Manhattan
Adjacent 2 (Abstract drawing)
By Xanda McCagg
Located in London, GB
Pencil and paint stick on paper. Unframed. This work on paper is about Minimalism and exploring minimalist ideas of small moments where one thing has an effect on the whole. On a s...
Category

2010s Abstract Expressionist Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paint, Paper, Pencil

L.I.C.
By Peter Soriano
Located in London, GB
Spray paint, pencil, ink, watercolor on paper. Unframed. Peter Soriano works on relatively large sheets of Japanese paper with a tendency to work from something observed, ideally ar...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Ink, Mixed Media, Spray Paint, Watercolor, Pencil

L.I.C. (Orange)
By Peter Soriano
Located in London, GB
Spray paint, pencil, ink, watercolor on paper. Unframed. Peter Soriano works on relatively large sheets of Japanese paper with a tendency to work from something observed, ideally ar...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Ink, Spray Paint, Watercolor, Pencil

6-29-22, Impressionist, abstracted landscape drawing with colored pencil
By Sandy Litchfield
Located in New York, NY
Sandy Litchfield brings her magical abstracted landscapes to a new medium in her recent colored pencil drawings. Loose, delicate lines scramble over one another, bringing a diffuse, ...
Category

2010s Impressionist Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Color Pencil

Willingness
Located in New York, NY
Ink on paper, Acrylic and / or watercolor, signed in the front, framed in a aluminum silver frame, glass. Philip Wittmann work is based on signs. Sign...
Category

2010s Contemporary Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Ink, Acrylic, Watercolor, Archival Paper, Archival Ink

Thaw 3 (Abstract drawing)
By Jaanika Peerna
Located in London, GB
Graphite and colored pencil on two layers of plastic paper. Unframed. Thaw Series is a new series of drawings where the artist continues her work touching upon environmental matter...
Category

2010s Abstract Expressionist Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Plastic, Color Pencil, Graphite

4th floor
By Peter Soriano
Located in London, GB
Spray paint, pencil, ink, watercolor on paper. Unframed. Peter Soriano works on relatively large sheets of Japanese paper with a tendency to work from something observed, ideally ar...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Ink, Spray Paint, Watercolor, Pencil

"Lagoon 05" Contemporary, colorful blue textured abstract pigment work on paper
Located in Dallas, TX
Emma's artwork is inspired by the Parisian luxury world of fashion, textures and colour. This blue tone artwork titled "Lagoon 05" works well on it's own or as a grouping. It comes f...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Acrylic, Archival Paper, Pigment

Loops.1- abstract geometric black and white ink drawing on paper
By Dana Piazza
Located in New York, NY
Dana Piazza's creates abstract black and white drawings, full of the illusion of depth, movement, and three-dimensionality. His highl...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Archival Ink, Archival Paper

Waffles.3- abstract geometric black and white ink drawing on paper
By Dana Piazza
Located in New York, NY
Dana Piazza's creates abstract black and white drawings, full of the illusion of depth, movement, and three-dimensionality. His highl...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Archival Ink, Archival Paper

Place- abstract geometric holographic light drawing on wood panel
Located in New York, NY
James Minden Place Holographic drawing- Hand incised plastic and acrylic on panel 24 x 24 inches 2013 To get a sense of the holographic effect look at the video on that vimeo's site...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Plastic, Acrylic, Wood Panel

Blue eyes- abstract geometric holographic light drawing on wood panel
Located in New York, NY
James Minden Blue Eyes Holographic drawing- Hand incised plastic and acrylic on panel 48 x 24 inches 2017 To get a sense of the holographic effect look at the video on that vimeo's ...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Plastic, Acrylic, Wood Panel

Verge - abstract geometric holographic light effect drawing on aluminum
Located in New York, NY
James Minden Verge Holographic drawing- engraved anodized aluminum and enamel paint 24 x 24 inches 2017 To get a sense of the holographic effect look at the video on that vimeo's si...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Metal, Enamel

Incidence- abstract geometric holographic effect light drawing on aluminum
Located in New York, NY
James Minden Incidence Holographic drawing- engraved anodized aluminum and enamel paint 24 x 24 inches 2017 To get a sense of the holographic effect...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Metal, Enamel

First Heirloom (cherry tomato), abstract pastel fruit still life
By Daisy Craddock
Located in New York, NY
Fresh from the summer harvest, we’re delighted to serve a new crop of demure fruit and vegetable diptychs from Abstractionist, Daisy Craddock. Daisy’s lush pairings of skin and flesh...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Oil Pastel

Modernist Abstract Lithograph w/ Multicolor Looping Line Work signed Yaakov Agam
Located in New York, NY
This Lovely Modernist Lithograph Originates from the Israeli born artist Yaakov Agam (made in Paris, France Circa 1980). This Lithograph is an Artist's Proof and a member of Agam's "...
Category

1980s Modern Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Lithograph

Orange and Blue Oil Pastel and Mixed Media Painting on Paper
By Renelio Marin
Located in New York, NY
Renelio Marin is a visual artist with a diverse range of influences and styles. Born in Cuba, he received his graduate degree from the San Alejandro School of Fine Arts in Havana in ...
Category

2010s Abstract Expressionist Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Oil Pastel, Acrylic, Color Pencil

A. 157-014- abstract geometric black and white ink drawing on mylar
By Patrick Carrara
Located in New York, NY
abstract geometric black and white ink drawing on mylar framed in white frame For over twenty years now Patrick Carrara has lived in Brooklyn, where he has maintained a studio and s...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Mylar, Archival Ink

Singularity, Halsey Chait, Abstract India Ink Drawing, Circle, Black, White
By Halsey Chait
Located in New York, NY
"Singularity" by Halsey Chait India Ink on 250 GSM Lenox 100 Cotton Rag Paper Halsey Chait's drawings develop according to the rules and mathematics that govern the growth processes...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Ink, India Ink, Rag Paper

Sumac, colorful Abstract Impressionist landscape gouache
By Sandy Litchfield
Located in New York, NY
Sandy Litchfield found peace and inspiration in regular solitary walks through nature throughout the pandemic. Her most recent body of work diaristically documents her constitutional...
Category

2010s Abstract Impressionist Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Gouache

Starbirth III, Halsey Chait, Abstract Drawing, Circle, Black, White
By Halsey Chait
Located in New York, NY
"Starbirth III" by Halsey Chait Acrylic on Birch Panel Halsey Chait's drawings develop according to the rules and mathematics that govern the growth processes of life forms and mole...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Wood, Birch, Acrylic, Wood Panel

Mixed Media Tricolor Abstract Bright Painting on Paper
By Renelio Marin
Located in New York, NY
Renelio Marin is a visual artist with a diverse range of influences and styles. Born in Cuba, he received his graduate degree from the San Alejandro School of Fine Arts in Havana in ...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Oil Pastel, Ballpoint Pen, Color Pencil

Albero (Tree)
By Jerelyn Hanrahan
Located in New York, NY
Category

Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Untitled II (green yellow), pastel on paper, 20 x 16 inches. Bright colors
By James Moore
Located in New York, NY
"I don’t see shapes as much as I see the energy of elements interacting to move, stop, support or explode. I mostly use clean bright color to keep my world hot and alive. My painting...
Category

1970s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Pastel

Open But Empty, 2023, framed abstract, colorful, watercolor and acrylic on paper
Located in New York, NY
Sarah Brenneman’s intimate abstractions are layers of referents of play. Beginning with a central form, her compositions topple out sequentially, each shape building on the impression of the last. Brenneman sources her forms from objects in her periphery, often in her home, rendering her paintings almost autobiographical, and forging a sense of familiarity. Brenneman received her BFA from Columbus College of Art and Design in Columbus, OH, and her MFA from Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, VA. Her work has been exhibited throughout the Tristate area, as well as internationally in Busan, South Korea, Reims, France, and St. Petersburg, Russia. Brenneman’s work is included in the permanent collections at the Aspen Contemporary Art Collection, the Cleveland Clinic, the Sprint Collection, and The Progressive Corporation. The artist is based in West Orange...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Acrylic, Watercolor

Untitled II (blue), pastel on paper, 20 x 16 inches. Bold colors
By James Moore
Located in New York, NY
"I don’t see shapes as much as I see the energy of elements interacting to move, stop, support or explode. I mostly use clean bright color to keep my world hot and alive. My painting...
Category

1970s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Pastel

Untitled II (multi), 1979, pastel on paper, 20 x 16 inches. Soft abstraction
By James Moore
Located in New York, NY
"I don’t see shapes as much as I see the energy of elements interacting to move, stop, support or explode. I mostly use clean bright color to keep my world hot and alive. My painting...
Category

1970s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Pastel

Maeve D'Arcy "Get The Answer" Acrylic and Colored Pencil on Paper
By Maeve D'Arcy
Located in New York, NY
"Borders, boundaries, and language, exist throughout my work and have manifested themselves in my sensibilities as an artist. The repetitive mark-making within my practice explores t...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Acrylic, Color Pencil

5-15-22, Impressionist, abstracted landscape drawing with colored pencil
By Sandy Litchfield
Located in New York, NY
Sandy Litchfield brings her magical abstracted landscapes to a new medium in her recent colored pencil drawings. Loose, delicate lines scramble over one another, bringing a diffuse, ...
Category

2010s Impressionist Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Color Pencil

Winnowing Basket (neutral patterned print)
By Angela A'Court
Located in New York, NY
Angela A’Court’s narrative and still life drawings use a simple and direct vocabulary to show the relationship of experience to expression of beauty and the quirkiness of every day moments. With an eye toward balance, the artist moves towards abstraction in "Winnowing Basket...
Category

2010s Contemporary Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Mixed Media, Paper, Pastel

Nancy Pantirer: Underwater Series. Yellow, Blue, & Green Abstract Organic Piece
Located in New York, NY
Nancy Pantirer Untitled Watercolor on paper 28 x 22 inches Part of Nancy Pantirer’s UNDERWATER series Nancy Pantirer’s UNDERWATER series features large watercolor and acrylic piece...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

Untitled: Clocks 1 (2nd Year in Black)
Located in New York, NY
M Finke, "Untitled: Clocks 1 (2nd Year in Black)", Modern/ Abstract Watercolor Painting signed and dated in Pencil, Early 20th Century, February 13, 1930 Colors: Black, Grey, White ...
Category

1930s Modern Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

Untitled (Colored Pencils), unique painting, Allan Stone Collection & Sotheby's
By Grace Knowlton
Located in New York, NY
Grace Knowlton Untitled (Colored Pencils), 1978 Mixed media watercolor and charcoal painting on paper. (Framed with labels from the legendary Allan Stone Collection...
Category

1970s Realist Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Charcoal, Watercolor, Mixed Media

Martina Nehrling "Sequencing 15" Acrylic on Montval Paper
By Martina Nehrling
Located in New York, NY
"Seduced by the formal complexity of color, I revel in its emotive slipperiness and enjoy mining its controversial decorativeness. The inextricability of these aspects unique to col...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Acrylic

Josette Urso "Wild Wood" Watercolor Painting on Paper
By Josette Urso
Located in New York, NY
"I paint directly and urgently from life. My paintings are “moment-to-moment” extrapolations. In them, I tap a kind of “hyper” or “trippy” vision, as I look simultaneously in all di...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

Spirit, a highly detailed geometric black ink drawing on clay-coated panel
By Jenifer Kent
Located in New York, NY
This mesmerizing ink drawing on clay-coated panel by Jenifer Kent shows off the artist's meditative process as she hand-draws, without assistance from a straight edge, a network of l...
Category

2010s Minimalist Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Ink, Panel

MUTE 4
By Francisca Sutil
Located in New York, NY
FRANCISCA SUTIL MUTE 4, 2009/2010 Gouache on paper 29 1/8 x 22 in. 74 x 56 cm. abstract
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Gouache, Paper

La croyance
Located in New York, NY
Ink on paper, Acrylic and / or watercolor, signed in the front, framed in a thin Blond wood frame, glass. Philip Wittmann work is based on signs. Signs are for him an intermediary b...
Category

2010s Contemporary Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Ink, Archival Paper

MUTE 1
By Francisca Sutil
Located in New York, NY
gouache and Chinese ink on paper
Category

Contemporary Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Josette Urso "Two Two Two Two" - Abstract Watercolor Painting on Paper
By Josette Urso
Located in New York, NY
Josette Urso Two Two Two Two, 2022 watercolor on paper 30 x 22 in. (urso236) Josette Urso’s paintings are driven by a sense of urgency. Working from her observations of her surround...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Watercolor

Red Flow II- Abstract contemporary painting on canvas, modern red flowing shape
Located in Dallas, TX
"Red Flow II" is a dramatic and contemporary abstract painting by French artist Emma Godebska. It is created using Acrylic and pigments on lacquered Capoverde canvas. Discover the ...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Gesso, Cotton Canvas, Acrylic, Pigment

Black Sky (The Cave Series), 4
By Panos Familis
Located in New York, NY
Black Sky (The Cave Series), 4 graphite on paper 77 x 112 cm
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Archival Paper, Graphite

Quantum, a highly detailed geometric black ink drawing on clay-coated panel
By Jenifer Kent
Located in New York, NY
This mesmerizing ink drawing on clay-coated panel by Jenifer Kent shows off the artist's meditative process as she hand-draws, without assistance from a straight edge, a network of l...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Ink, Wood Panel

Geometries 4, a highly detailed geometric black ink drawing on clay-coated panel
By Jenifer Kent
Located in New York, NY
This mesmerizing ink drawing on clay-coated panel by Jenifer Kent shows off the artist's meditative process as she hand-draws, without assistance from a straight edge, a network of l...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Ink, Wood Panel

Tsakli 04-06-2022, abstract water media painting
By Ray Kass
Located in New York, NY
The latest watercolors from Ray Kass strike a balance between audacity and contemplation. Drawing from the Tibetan Buddhist tradition of the Tsakli - sets of miniature paintings feat...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Wax, Watercolor, Wood Panel, Pigment, Mica

Tsakli 04-05-2022, abstract water media painting
By Ray Kass
Located in New York, NY
The latest watercolors from Ray Kass strike a balance between audacity and contemplation. Drawing from the Tibetan Buddhist tradition of the Tsakli - sets of miniature paintings feat...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Wax, Watercolor, Wood Panel, Pigment, Mica

Framed Watercolor Painting on Handmade Indian Paper: Blackbird C
Located in New York, NY
Guillermo Bublik is an Argentinian/American painter based in New Jersey. His works are easily recognizable by their bold combinations of colors and abstract geometric forms. Commonly...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor, Handmade Paper

Framed Watercolor Painting on Handmade Indian Paper: Blackbird B
Located in New York, NY
Guillermo Bublik is an Argentinian/American painter based in New Jersey. His works are easily recognizable by their bold combinations of colors and abstract geometric forms. Commonly...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor, Handmade Paper

Tsakli 4-02-2022, abstract water media painting
By Ray Kass
Located in New York, NY
The latest watercolors from Ray Kass strike a balance between audacity and contemplation. Drawing from the Tibetan Buddhist tradition of the Tsakli - sets of miniature paintings feat...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Wax, Watercolor, Wood Panel, Pigment, Mica

Giotto
Located in New York, NY
Robert Petersen Giotto, 1989 Mixed Media: Silkscreen with Watercolor and Acrylic on paper Hand signed, numbered and dated on front A.P 2/3 Frame Included This vivid hand signed mixed...
Category

1980s Contemporary Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Mixed Media, Acrylic, Watercolor, Screen

Annual Rings SC
Located in New York, NY
Jean Shin Annual Rings SC, 2015 Graphite Rubbing on Rice Paper Signed in graphite on the front 8 × 11 inches Unframed This poignant graphite rubbing on rice pa...
Category

2010s Contemporary Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Rice Paper, Graphite

Untitled Abstract Expressionist work on paper
By David Humphrey
Located in New York, NY
David Humphrey Untitled, 2015 Acrylic on paper Hand signed and dated 2015 on the lower left front 11 × 8 1/2 inches Unframed This original painting was created by David Humphrey in 2015 at Tamarind...
Category

2010s Abstract Expressionist Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Acrylic, Photographic Paper

The Big City, Halsey Chait, Abstract India Ink Drawing, Circle, Black, White
By Halsey Chait
Located in New York, NY
"The Big City" by Halsey Chait India Ink on 250 GSM Lenox 100 Cotton Rag Paper Halsey Chait's drawings develop according to the rules and mathematics that govern the growth processe...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Ink, India Ink, Rag Paper

Spring, 2009
By Matt Kinney
Located in Hudson, NY
ABOUT Matt Kinney was born in Georgetown, Massachusetts. He attended Pratt Institute and The School of the Museum of Fine Arts, graduating in 1998. After graduation, Kinney began in...
Category

Early 2000s Contemporary Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor

Sarah Irvin "Outbreak" - Abstract Painting on Paper
By Sarah Irvin
Located in New York, NY
Sarah Irvin Outbreak, 2015 ink on Yupo 26 x 40 in. This abstract ink painting on Yupo paper plays with transparency and color in shades blue and gray. "In this work I write cursive...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Ink, Paper

Rosa Bianca, green and purple abstract pastel fruit portrait, 2018
By Daisy Craddock
Located in New York, NY
A produce portraitist, Daisy Craddock's abstract oil pastel diptychs capture the skin and flesh of her subjects. Daisy Craddock examines her fruits and ...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Oil Pastel

Study for Old Canal, Red and Blue (Rockaway, Morris Canal)
By Oscar Florianus Bluemner
Located in New York, NY
Oscar Bluemner was a German and an American, a trained architect who read voraciously in art theory, color theory, and philosophy, a writer of art criticism both in German and English, and, above all, a practicing artist. Bluemner was an intense man, who sought to express and share, through drawing and painting, universal emotional experience. Undergirded by theory, Bluemner chose color and line for his vehicles; but color especially became the focus of his passion. He was neither abstract artist nor realist, but employed the “expressional use of real phenomena” to pursue his ends. (Oscar Bluemner, from unpublished typescript on “Modern Art” for Camera Work, in Bluemner papers, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution, as cited and quoted in Jeffrey R. Hayes, Oscar Bluemner [1991], p. 60. The Bluemner papers in the Archives [hereafter abbreviated as AAA] are the primary source for Bluemner scholars. Jeffrey Hayes read them thoroughly and translated key passages for his doctoral dissertation, Oscar Bluemner: Life, Art, and Theory [University of Maryland, 1982; UMI reprint, 1982], which remains the most comprehensive source on Bluemner. In 1991, Hayes published a monographic study of Bluemner digested from his dissertation and, in 2005, contributed a brief essay to the gallery show at Barbara Mathes, op. cit.. The most recent, accessible, and comprehensive view of Bluemner is the richly illustrated, Barbara Haskell, Oscar Bluemner: A Passion for Color, exhib. cat. [New York: Whitney Museum of American Art, 2005.]) Bluemner was born in the industrial city of Prenzlau, Prussia, the son and grandson of builders and artisans. He followed the family predilection and studied architecture, receiving a traditional and thorough German training. He was a prize-winning student and appeared to be on his way to a successful career when he decided, in 1892, to emigrate to America, drawn perhaps by the prospect of immediate architectural opportunities at the Chicago World’s Fair, but, more importantly, seeking a freedom of expression and an expansiveness that he believed he would find in the New World. The course of Bluemner’s American career proved uneven. He did indeed work as an architect in Chicago, but left there distressed at the formulaic quality of what he was paid to do. Plagued by periods of unemployment, he lived variously in Chicago, New York, and Boston. At one especially low point, he pawned his coat and drafting tools and lived in a Bowery flophouse, selling calendars on the streets of New York and begging for stale bread. In Boston, he almost decided to return home to Germany, but was deterred partly because he could not afford the fare for passage. He changed plans and direction again, heading for Chicago, where he married Lina Schumm, a second-generation German-American from Wisconsin. Their first child, Paul Robert, was born in 1897. In 1899, Bluemner became an American citizen. They moved to New York City where, until 1912, Bluemner worked as an architect and draftsman to support his family, which also included a daughter, Ella Vera, born in 1903. All the while, Oscar Bluemner was attracted to the freer possibilities of art. He spent weekends roaming Manhattan’s rural margins, visiting the Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens, and New Jersey, sketching landscapes in hundreds of small conté crayon drawings. Unlike so many city-based artists, Bluemner did not venture out in search of pristine countryside or unspoiled nature. As he wrote in 1932, in an unsuccessful application for a Guggenheim Fellowship, “I prefer the intimate landscape of our common surroundings, where town and country mingle. For we are in the habit to carry into them our feelings of pain and pleasure, our moods” (as quoted by Joyce E. Brodsky in “Oscar Bluemner in Black and White,” p. 4, in Bulletin 1977, I, no. 5, The William Benton Museum of Art, Storrs, Connecticut). By 1911, Bluemner had found a powerful muse in a series of old industrial towns, mostly in New Jersey, strung along the route of the Morris Canal. While he educated himself at museums and art galleries, Bluemner entered numerous architectural competitions. In 1903, in partnership with Michael Garven, he designed a new courthouse for Bronx County. Garven, who had ties to Tammany Hall, attempted to exclude Bluemner from financial or artistic credit, but Bluemner promptly sued, and, finally, in 1911, after numerous appeals, won a $7,000 judgment. Barbara Haskell’s recent catalogue reveals more details of Bluemner’s architectural career than have previously been known. Bluemner the architect was also married with a wife and two children. He took what work he could get and had little pride in what he produced, a galling situation for a passionate idealist, and the undoubted explanation for why he later destroyed the bulk of his records for these years. Beginning in 1907, Bluemner maintained a diary, his “Own Principles of Painting,” where he refined his ideas and incorporated insights from his extensive reading in philosophy and criticism both in English and German to create a theoretical basis for his art. Sometime between 1908 and 1910, Bluemner’s life as an artist was transformed by his encounter with the German-educated Alfred Stieglitz, proprietor of the Little Galleries of the Photo-Secession at 291 Fifth Avenue. The two men were kindred Teutonic souls. Bluemner met Stieglitz at about the time that Stieglitz was shifting his serious attention away from photography and toward contemporary art in a modernist idiom. Stieglitz encouraged and presided over Bluemner’s transition from architect to painter. During the same period elements of Bluemner’s study of art began to coalesce into a personal vision. A Van Gogh show in 1908 convinced Bluemner that color could be liberated from the constraints of naturalism. In 1911, Bluemner visited a Cézanne watercolor show at Stieglitz’s gallery and saw, in Cézanne’s formal experiments, a path for uniting Van Gogh’s expressionist use of color with a reality-based but non-objective language of form. A definitive change of course in Bluemner’s professional life came in 1912. Ironically, it was the proceeds from his successful suit to gain credit for his architectural work that enabled Bluemner to commit to painting as a profession. Dividing the judgment money to provide for the adequate support of his wife and two children, he took what remained and financed a trip to Europe. Bluemner traveled across the Continent and England, seeing as much art as possible along the way, and always working at a feverish pace. He took some of his already-completed work with him on his European trip, and arranged his first-ever solo exhibitions in Berlin, Leipzig, and Elberfeld, Germany. After Bluemner returned from his study trip, he was a painter, and would henceforth return to drafting only as a last-ditch expedient to support his family when his art failed to generate sufficient income. Bluemner became part of the circle of Stieglitz artists at “291,” a group which included Marsden Hartley, John Marin, and Arthur Dove. He returned to New York in time to show five paintings at the 1913 Armory Show and began, as well, to publish critical and theoretical essays in Stieglitz’s journal, Camera Work. In its pages he cogently defended the Armory Show against the onslaught of conservative attacks. In 1915, under Stieglitz’s auspices, Bluemner had his first American one-man show at “291.” Bluemner’s work offers an interesting contrast with that of another Stieglitz architect-turned-artist, John Marin, who also had New Jersey connections. The years after 1914 were increasingly uncomfortable. Bluemner remained, all of his life, proud of his German cultural legacy, contributing regularly to German language journals and newspapers in this country. The anti-German sentiment, indeed mania, before and during World War I, made life difficult for the artist and his family. It is impossible to escape the political agenda in Charles Caffin’s critique of Bluemner’s 1915 show. Caffin found in Bluemner’s precise and earnest explorations of form, “drilled, regimented, coerced . . . formations . . . utterly alien to the American idea of democracy” (New York American, reprinted in Camera Work, no. 48 [Oct. 1916], as quoted in Hayes, 1991, p. 71). In 1916, seeking a change of scene, more freedom to paint, and lower expenses, Bluemner moved his family to New Jersey, familiar terrain from his earlier sketching and painting. During the ten years they lived in New Jersey, the Bluemner family moved around the state, usually, but not always, one step ahead of the rent collector. In 1917, Stieglitz closed “291” and did not reestablish a Manhattan gallery until 1925. In the interim, Bluemner developed relationships with other dealers and with patrons. Throughout his career he drew support and encouragement from art cognoscenti who recognized his talent and the high quality of his work. Unfortunately, that did not pay the bills. Chronic shortfalls were aggravated by Bluemner’s inability to sustain supportive relationships. He was a difficult man, eternally bitter at the gap between the ideal and the real. Hard on himself and hard on those around him, he ultimately always found a reason to bite the hand that fed him. Bluemner never achieved financial stability. He left New Jersey in 1926, after the death of his beloved wife, and settled in South Braintree, Massachusetts, outside of Boston, where he continued to paint until his own death in 1938. As late as 1934 and again in 1936, he worked for New Deal art programs designed to support struggling artists. Bluemner held popular taste and mass culture in contempt, and there was certainly no room in his quasi-religious approach to art for accommodation to any perceived commercial advantage. His German background was also problematic, not only for its political disadvantages, but because, in a world where art is understood in terms of national styles, Bluemner was sui generis, and, to this day, lacks a comfortable context. In 1933, Bluemner adopted Florianus (definitively revising his birth names, Friedrich Julius Oskar) as his middle name and incorporated it into his signature, to present “a Latin version of his own surname that he believed reinforced his career-long effort to translate ordinary perceptions into the more timeless and universal languages of art” (Hayes 1982, p. 189 n. 1). In 1939, critic Paul Rosenfeld, a friend and member of the Stieglitz circle, responding to the difficulty in categorizing Bluemner, perceptively located him among “the ranks of the pre-Nazi German moderns” (Hayes 1991, p. 41). Bluemner was powerfully influenced in his career by the intellectual heritage of two towering figures of nineteenth-century German culture, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe and Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel. A keen student of color theory, Bluemner gave pride of place to the formulations of Goethe, who equated specific colors with emotional properties. In a November 19, 1915, interview in the German-language newspaper, New Yorker Staats-Zeitung (Abendblatt), he stated: I comprehend the visible world . . . abstract the primary-artistic . . . and after these elements of realty are extracted and analyzed, I reconstruct a new free creation that still resembles the original, but also . . . becomes an objectification of the abstract idea of beauty. The first—and most conspicuous mark of this creation is . . . colors which accord with the character of things, the locality . . . [and which] like the colors of Cranach, van der Weyden, or Durer, are of absolute purity, breadth, and luminosity. . . . I proceed from the psychological use of color by the Old Masters . . . [in which] we immediately recognize colors as carriers of “sorrow and joy” in Goethe’s sense, or as signs of human relationship. . . . Upon this color symbolism rests the beauty as well as the expressiveness, of earlier sacred paintings. Above all, I recognize myself as a contributor to the new German theory of light and color, which expands Goethe’s law of color through modern scientific means (as quoted in Hayes 1991, p. 71). Hayes has traced the global extent of Bluemner’s intellectual indebtedness to Hegel (1991, pp. 36–37). More specifically, Bluemner made visual, in his art, the Hegelian world view, in the thesis and antithesis of the straight line and the curve, the red and the green, the vertical and the horizontal, the agitation and the calm. Bluemner respected all of these elements equally, painting and drawing the tension and dynamic of the dialectic and seeking ultimate reconciliation in a final visual synthesis. Bluemner was a keen student of art, past and present, looking, dissecting, and digesting all that he saw. He found precedents for his non-naturalist use of brilliant-hued color not only in the work Van Gogh and Cezanne, but also in Gauguin, the Nabis, and the Symbolists, as well as among his contemporaries, the young Germans of Der Blaue Reiter. Bluemner was accustomed to working to the absolute standard of precision required of the architectural draftsman, who adjusts a design many times until its reality incorporates both practical imperatives and aesthetic intentions. Hayes describes Bluemner’s working method, explaining how the artist produced multiple images playing on the same theme—in sketch form, in charcoal, and in watercolor, leading to the oil works that express the ultimate completion of his process (Hayes, 1982, pp. 156–61, including relevant footnotes). Because of Bluemner’s working method, driven not only by visual considerations but also by theoretical constructs, his watercolor and charcoal studies have a unique integrity. They are not, as is sometimes the case with other artists, rough preparatory sketches. They stand on their own, unfinished only in the sense of not finally achieving Bluemner’s carefully considered purpose. The present charcoal drawing is one of a series of images that take as their starting point the Morris Canal as it passed through Rockaway, New Jersey. The Morris Canal industrial towns that Bluemner chose as the points of departure for his early artistic explorations in oil included Paterson with its silk mills (which recalled the mills in the artist’s childhood home in Elberfeld), the port city of Hoboken, Newark, and, more curiously, a series of iron ore mining and refining towns, in the north central part of the state that pre-dated the Canal, harkening back to the era of the Revolutionary War. The Rockaway theme was among the original group of oil paintings that Bluemner painted in six productive months from July through December 1911 and took with him to Europe in 1912. In his painting journal, Bluemner called this work Morris Canal at Rockaway N.J. (AAA, reel 339, frames 150 and 667, Hayes, 1982, pp. 116–17), and exhibited it at the Galerie Fritz Gurlitt in Berlin in 1912 as Rockaway N. J. Alter Kanal. After his return, Bluemner scraped down and reworked these canvases. The Rockaway picture survives today, revised between 1914 and 1922, as Old Canal, Red and Blue (Rockaway River) in the collection of the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Washington D. C. (color illus. in Haskell, fig. 48, p. 65). For Bluemner, the charcoal expression of his artistic vision was a critical step in composition. It represented his own adaptation of Arthur Wesley’s Dow’s (1857–1922) description of a Japanese...
Category

20th Century American Modern Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Paper, Charcoal

To Break, To Blossom 25-03
Located in New York, NY
Aida experiences resilience: she paints, she breaks and she rebuilds. Watercolor, subtle and delicate, turns into great sculpture. The beauty of scars in her work — imperfect and fra...
Category

2010s Contemporary Manhattan - Abstract Drawings and Watercolors

Materials

Watercolor, Archival Paper

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