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Fine Art in New York City

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Item Ships From: New York City
Anges’ Cousin in America, expressive, monochrome, expressive
Located in New York, NY
This photogravure by Carol Munder, 16 x 16" framed; has a beautiful sense of light that creates an expressive image for the viewer, depicting a quiet scene divided in foreground, middle ground, and background that draws the viewer into the atmospheric perspective. In the foreground there is a haunting figure making eye contact, followed by some houses that create a gap to reveal another figure in the background that is out of focus, all if these aspects come together creating an engaging narrative. Carol Munder (b. 1953) is a Key West based photographer and lithographer. Munder graduated from Colombia College in 1973 with a focus in photography. In 1986, she was the recipient of the NEXUS PRESS Book Competition residency. From the mid-1990s to the early 2000s, she created large-format black and white prints of nineteenth-century statuary and Etruscan figurines utilizing a simplistic camera with a plastic lens. After she acquired a gravure press, Munder taught herself the art of photogravure. Munder explains, "This [plastic] lens produces a soft focus image that is evident in my work…The tree then branches as I work with the process if photogravure. Photogravure is a 19th century technique used to transfer an image to a copper plate by means of photomechanical process... the plate is [then] inked and printed on paper using a gravure press. My current imagery is focusing on wooden sculptures that have been found in French flea markets"
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Photogravure

"Salsa Cures Sadness" Textile Fiber Art, Discarded Clothing, Vivid Colors
Located in New York, NY
This artwork was featured in The Untitled Space group show " UNRAVELED: Confronting The Fabric Of Fiber Art" at The Untitled Space from April 17 - May 28th, 2021. Linda Friedman Schmidt...
Category

Early 2000s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Textile, Mixed Media, Fabric

Many-Worlds Interpretation (H.C.H.P)
By Colin Hunt
Located in New York, NY
Looking at a painting by Colin Hunt is like watching someone pass through a hole in our consciousness. As the landscape refracts through the sitter’s absence and fills that emptiness...
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Egg Tempera, Panel

Malinalco, 2017
By Iliana Ortega
Located in New York, NY
Malinalco 2017, Is a piece that belongs to a larger series of photo paintings consisting of about 52 total. This piece is made with; ink, and enamel ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Archival Pigment

Prop
By Randall Exon
Located in New York, NY
Oil on canvas
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Canvas, Oil

YELLOW, GREEN, BLACK, WHITE - Contemporary Realism / Still Life Color Apples
By Edward Butler
Located in New York, NY
Original still life painting by Edward A. Butler.
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Linen, Oil

Breakfast with Irving Penn 1947
By Anastasia Samoylova
Located in New York, NY
In Anastasia Samoylova's "Breakfast With" series, photo books are splayed open and the iconic images therein mingle with the first meal of the day, reading as affectionate homages to...
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Digital Pigment

Like Ice in the Sunshine II (L.A.) No. 17
By Simone Rosenbauer
Located in New York, NY
15 x 15 archival pigment print (image size 14 x 14 inches), edition 8. Signed, titled, dated and editioned on frame label provided. Framing also available at an additional cost. In ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Archival Pigment

"Word Portrait: In Carl's Words" Painting, Pastels on Cutout Canvas, Figurative
By Grace Graupe-Pillard
Located in New York, NY
Grace Graupe-Pillard has concentrated on portraiture since her early charcoal drawings which she exhibited at The Drawing Center, NYC in 1981. Her work, which has been exhibited at notable institutions such as MOMA PS1 and galleries including Cheim & Read Gallery (NY) and Carl Hammer Gallery (Chicago), has evolved from over the years from pastels to large-scale oil paintings and installations of people who she describes as “having not been integrated into mainstream society.” Her more recent paintings, inspired by selfies and iPhone photographs, attempt to convey the vitality and diversity of 21st century contemporary culture while capturing the ineffable moments in our lives. “The sensuality and radiant beauty of youth and ethnic diversity are depicted in my choice of subjects, as well as the ravages of time which are imprinted on our being. All stages of life are filled with humanity that both elevates and dissipates the spirit.” Her work has been written about in The NY Times, Art News, The Village Voice...
Category

1990s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Canvas, Paint, Pastel

Like Ice in the Sunshine II (L.A.) No. 15
By Simone Rosenbauer
Located in New York, NY
15 x 15 archival pigment print (image size 14 x 14 inches), edition 8. Signed, titled, dated and editioned on frame label provided. Framing also available at an additional cost. In ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Archival Pigment

Untitled
Located in New York, NY
Acrylic on canvas 36.60 x 48.40 in unstretched
Category

2010s Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Acrylic

@…Connecting People (Version 3)
Located in New York, NY
2022, Mixed media on wood
Category

2010s Art Deco Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Wood, Mixed Media

Marilyn Monroe, Jumping
By Philippe Halsman
Located in New York, NY
1954 Gelatin silver Print, vintage 14 x 11 in. Stamped on verso
Category

1950s Other Art Style Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Silver Gelatin

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 Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Color Pencil

Twin Greek Temples (Night), After Dark in Central Park in New York City
By Roberta Fineberg
Located in New york, NY
A contemporary black-and-white photograph by Roberta Fineberg who captures the San Remo building and New York City skyline after dark from the urban oasis Central Park. Focusing on the beaux-arts building towers or twin Greek temples...
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Archival Ink, Archival Paper, Rag Paper, Digital, Archival Pigment, Digi...

Untitled
By Luisa Freixas
Located in New York, NY
Unstretched Mixed media on canvas I am interested in nature as inspiration trigger of my artistic process. The techniques I work with are woodcut, oil, charcoal and collage. I hav...
Category

2010s Abstract Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Canvas

Untitled (Boat)
By Louisa Chase
Located in New York, NY
Louisa Lizbeth Chase was born in 1951 to Benjamin and Wilda Stengel Chase in Panama City, Panama, where her father, a West Point graduate, was stationed. The family moved to Pennsylv...
Category

20th Century Modern Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Canvas, Oil

United Together
Located in Brooklyn, NY
"United Together" is part of a series called "Spoken" by artist Kelvin Agyepong Ansong which depicts the fierce fight women around the world continue t...
Category

2010s Cubist Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Untitled
By Isabel Turban
Located in New York, NY
Isabel Turbán layers paintings with transfers, acrylic, charcoal, and other mixed media onto canvas or paper. Her abstract paintings manifest memory, cultural experience, and politic...
Category

2010s Abstract Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Acrylic

Untitled
By Martin Reyna
Located in New York, NY
Martin Reyna Untitled, 2015 Mixed media on paper 18 x 24 in (45.72h x 60.96w cm)
Category

2010s Abstract Expressionist Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Paper, Acrylic

le Bois
By Martin Reyna
Located in New York, NY
Martin Reyna le Bois, 2015 Mixed media on paper 59.05 x 76.77 in (149.99h x 195w cm)
Category

2010s Abstract Expressionist Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Paper, Acrylic

Japanese Girl Promenading
By Harry Humphrey Moore
Located in New York, NY
Harry Humphrey Moore led a cosmopolitan lifestyle, dividing his time between Europe, New York City, and California. This globe-trotting painter was also active in Morocco, and most importantly, he was among the first generation of American artists to live and work in Japan, where he depicted temples, tombs, gardens, merchants, children, and Geisha girls. Praised by fellow painters such as Thomas Eakins, John Singer Sargent, and Jean-Léon Gérôme, Moore’s fame was attributed to his exotic subject matter, as well as to the “brilliant coloring, delicate brush work [sic] and the always present depth of feeling” that characterized his work (Eugene A. Hajdel, Harry H. Moore, American 19th Century: Collection of Information on Harry Humphrey Moore, 19th Century Artist, Based on His Scrap Book and Other Data [Jersey City, New Jersey: privately published, 1950], p. 8). Born in New York City, Moore was the son of Captain George Humphrey, an affluent shipbuilder, and a descendant of the English painter, Ozias Humphrey (1742–1810). He became deaf at age three, and later went to special schools where he learned lip-reading and sign language. After developing an interest in art as a young boy, Moore studied painting with the portraitist Samuel Waugh in Philadelphia, where he met and became friendly with Eakins. He also received instruction from the painter Louis Bail in New Haven, Connecticut. In 1864, Moore attended classes at the Mark Hopkins Institute in San Francisco, and until 1907, he would visit the “City by the Bay” regularly. In 1865, Moore went to Europe, spending time in Munich before traveling to Paris, where, in October 1866, he resumed his formal training in Gérôme’s atelier, drawing inspiration from his teacher’s emphasis on authentic detail and his taste for picturesque genre subjects. There, Moore worked alongside Eakins, who had mastered sign language in order to communicate with his friend. In March 1867, Moore enrolled at the prestigious École des Beaux-Arts, honing his drawing skills under the tutelage of Adolphe Yvon, among other leading French painters. In December 1869, Moore traveled around Spain with Eakins and the Philadelphia engraver, William Sartain. In 1870, he went to Madrid, where he met the Spanish painters Mariano Fortuny and Martin Rico y Ortega. When Eakins and Sartain returned to Paris, Moore remained in Spain, painting depictions of Moorish life in cities such as Segovia and Granada and fraternizing with upper-crust society. In 1872, he married Isabella de Cistue, the well-connected daughter of Colonel Cistue of Saragossa, who was related to the Queen of Spain. For the next two-and-a-half years, the couple lived in Morocco, where Moore painted portraits, interiors, and streetscapes, often accompanied by an armed guard (courtesy of the Grand Sharif) when painting outdoors. (For this aspect of Moore’s oeuvre, see Gerald M. Ackerman, American Orientalists [Courbevoie, France: ACR Édition, 1994], pp. 135–39.) In 1873, he went to Rome, spending two years studying with Fortuny, whose lively technique, bright palette, and penchant for small-format genre scenes made a lasting impression on him. By this point in his career, Moore had emerged as a “rapid workman” who could “finish a picture of given size and containing a given subject quicker than most painters whose style is more simple and less exacting” (New York Times, as quoted in Hajdel, p. 23). In 1874, Moore settled in New York City, maintaining a studio on East 14th Street, where he would remain until 1880. During these years, he participated intermittently in the annuals of the National Academy of Design in New York and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia, exhibiting Moorish subjects and views of Spain. A well-known figure in Bay Area art circles, Moore had a one-man show at the Snow & May Gallery in San Francisco in 1877, and a solo exhibition at the Bohemian Club, also in San Francisco, in 1880. Indeed, Moore fraternized with many members of the city’s cultural elite, including Katherine Birdsall Johnson (1834–1893), a philanthropist and art collector who owned The Captive (current location unknown), one of his Orientalist subjects. (Johnson’s ownership of The Captive was reported in L. K., “A Popular Paris Artist,” New York Times, July 23, 1893.) According to one contemporary account, Johnson invited Moore and his wife to accompany her on a trip to Japan in 1880 and they readily accepted. (For Johnson’s connection to Moore’s visit to Japan, see Emma Willard and Her Pupils; or, Fifty Years of Troy Female Seminary [New York: Mrs. Russell Sage, 1898]. Johnson’s bond with the Moores was obviously strong, evidenced by the fact that she left them $25,000.00 in her will, which was published in the San Francisco Call on December 10, 1893.) That Moore would be receptive to making the arduous voyage across the Pacific is understandable in view of his penchant for foreign motifs. Having opened its doors to trade with the West in 1854, and in the wake of Japan’s presence at the Philadelphia Centennial Exposition of 1876, American artists were becoming increasingly fascinated by what one commentator referred to as that “ideal dreamland of the poet” (L. K., “A Popular Paris Artist”). Moore, who was in Japan during 1880–81, became one of the first American artists to travel to the “land of the rising sun,” preceded only by the illustrator, William Heime, who went there in 1851 in conjunction with the Japanese expedition of Commodore Matthew C. Perry; Edward Kern, a topographical artist and explorer who mapped the Japanese coast in 1855; and the Boston landscapist, Winckleworth Allan Gay, a resident of Japan from 1877 to 1880. More specifically, as William H. Gerdts has pointed out, Moore was the “first American painter to seriously address the appearance and mores of the Japanese people” (William H. Gerdts, American Artists in Japan, 1859–1925, exhib. cat. [New York: Hollis Taggart Galleries, 1996], p. 5). During his sojourn in Japan, Moore spent time in Tokyo, Yokohama, Kyoto, Nikko, and Osaka, carefully observing the local citizenry, their manners and mode of dress, and the country’s distinctive architecture. Working on easily portable panels, he created about sixty scenes of daily life, among them this sparkling portrayal of a young woman dressed in a traditional kimono and carrying a baby on her back, a paper parasol...
Category

Late 19th Century Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Oil, Wood Panel

Japanese Children with Tortoise
By Harry Humphrey Moore
Located in New York, NY
Harry Humphrey Moore led a cosmopolitan lifestyle, dividing his time between Europe, New York City, and California. This globe-trotting painter was also active in Morocco, and most importantly, he was among the first generation of American artists to live and work in Japan, where he depicted temples, tombs, gardens, merchants, children, and Geisha girls. Praised by fellow painters such as Thomas Eakins, John Singer Sargent, and Jean-Léon Gérôme, Moore’s fame was attributed to his exotic subject matter, as well as to the “brilliant coloring, delicate brush work [sic] and the always present depth of feeling” that characterized his work (Eugene A. Hajdel, Harry H. Moore, American 19th Century: Collection of Information on Harry Humphrey Moore, 19th Century Artist, Based on His Scrap Book and Other Data [Jersey City, New Jersey: privately published, 1950], p. 8). Born in New York City, Moore was the son of Captain George Humphrey, an affluent shipbuilder, and a descendant of the English painter, Ozias Humphrey (1742–1810). He became deaf at age three, and later went to special schools where he learned lip-reading and sign language. After developing an interest in art as a young boy, Moore studied painting with the portraitist Samuel Waugh in Philadelphia, where he met and became friendly with Eakins. He also received instruction from the painter Louis Bail in New Haven, Connecticut. In 1864, Moore attended classes at the Mark Hopkins Institute in San Francisco, and until 1907, he would visit the “City by the Bay” regularly. In 1865, Moore went to Europe, spending time in Munich before traveling to Paris, where, in October 1866, he resumed his formal training in Gérôme’s atelier, drawing inspiration from his teacher’s emphasis on authentic detail and his taste for picturesque genre subjects. There, Moore worked alongside Eakins, who had mastered sign language in order to communicate with his friend. In March 1867, Moore enrolled at the prestigious École des Beaux-Arts, honing his drawing skills under the tutelage of Adolphe...
Category

Late 19th Century Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Oil, Wood Panel

CALM WHISPERS - STATE 2 - Waterscape / Reflections / Contemporary Art
By Susan Goldsmith
Located in New York, NY
Original photograph by artist Susan Goldsmith.
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Resin, Mixed Media

Rome, Italy
By Luca Campigotto
Located in New York, NY
45 x 55.5 inch pure pigment print (framed size) Signed, titled, dated and editioned on label verso Edition 15 (includes all sizes) Framed in a charcoal gray frame Luca Campigotto us...
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Archival Pigment

JAM ON BREAD - Food Still Life / Pop Art / Photorealism / Kitchen
By Richard Combes
Located in New York, NY
A British-born, American based painter, Richard Combes focuses his subjects on the forgotten or the forlorn, perhaps indications or remnants of a time before.
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Oil, Canvas

Pico Garcez - Atacama #1, Landscape Photography
By Pico Garcez
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Pico Garcez (b.1963, São Paulo, Brazil) In Love with Photography, Iconography and Painting, exercises his gaze from childhood when he began to play with his first camera. Practicing ...
Category

2010s Realist Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Cotton, Archival Paper, Inkjet, Archival Pigment

Twig Arrangement in front of Garden Arrangement - Grey blue
By Bruce McLean
Located in London, GB
A painting by contemporary Scottish sculptor, painter and performance artist Bruce McLean.
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Charcoal, Acrylic

Head
Located in New York, NY
Mixed media and Painted wood, wall sculpture by Rick Prol.
Category

1980s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Wood

Lost 21
By Klaus Leidorf
Located in New York, NY
This aerial photograph was taken by Klaus Leidorf from an airplane (which he also flies). It was not staged or manipulated and can be custom size.
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Archival Pigment

Sabrett Hot Dog Vendors, New York City
By Neal Slavin
Located in New York, NY
24 x 24 inch digital chromogenic print Edition 15 +3 AP Signed, titled, dated and editioned on frame label provided Neal Slavin, a native New Yorker, began photographing groups in 1...
Category

1970s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Digital

Untitled (After Lygia Clark)
By Luciana Levinton
Located in New York, NY
35.40 x 82.30 in Oil on canvas Unstretched
Category

2010s Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Oil

Tree line
By Klaus Leidorf
Located in New York, NY
Klaus Leidorf was born on June 5th 1956 in Bonn (Germany. After a few years working as research assistant at the University of Marburg and employee at the Bavarian State Office for t...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

C Print, Plexiglass

The Staring Figures
By Max Weber
Located in New York, NY
The Staring Figures by Max Weber (1881-1961) Ink, pencil, and watercolor on paper 10 ½ x 7 ½ inches unframed (26.67 x 19.05 cm) 16 ½ x 11 ½ inches framed (41.91 x 29.21 cm) Descript...
Category

20th Century Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Watercolor, Ink, Pencil

Untitled (Sesc Pompeia)
By Luciana Levinton
Located in New York, NY
Oil on canvas 62 x 62 in Unstretched Luciana Levinton de-contextualizes architectural elements, sketches facades, delineates floor plan...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Oil

Floating Market Asia
By Pico Garcez
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Pico Garcez (b.1963, São Paulo, Brazil) In Love with Photography, Iconography and Painting, exercises his gaze from childhood when he began to play with his first camera. Practicing ...
Category

2010s Realist Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Archival Paper, Cotton, Inkjet, Archival Pigment

Vibrant Swimming Motion Paris France by Photographer Pico Garcez
By Pico Garcez
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Paris France - Vibrant aqua blue. Photography Edition Print. Pico Garcez (b.1963, São Paulo, Brazil) In Love with Photography, Iconography and Painting, exercises his gaze from chil...
Category

2010s Realist Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Cotton, Archival Paper, Inkjet, Archival Pigment

Joseph McCarthy as Baby New Year on a Hobbyhorse
By Reginald Marsh
Located in New York, NY
ink on beige sight size: 254 x 317 mm. PROVENANCE Acquired directly from the artist by Edward Laning (who inherited Marsh's studio) to Jack Henderson...
Category

1950s Other Art Style Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Paper, Ink

Políptico Objetos Memorables II - Escuadras
By Viviana Zargón
Located in New York, NY
Digital photography, gicleé print on Canson Platine cotton paper 310gsm unframed. Viviana Zargón constructs a pictorial universe of industrial imaginat...
Category

2010s Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Digital

Políptico Objetos Memorables II - Taco
By Viviana Zargón
Located in New York, NY
Digital photography, gicleé print on Canson Platine cotton paper 310gsm unframed. Viviana Zargón constructs a pictorial universe of industrial imagination in the exploration of aban...
Category

2010s Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Digital

GHOST SIGN ON A WALL - Photorealism / Contemporary Cityscape / Bombay Sapphire
By Richard Combes
Located in New York, NY
Original oil painting by Richard Combes featuring a Bombay Sapphire sign.
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Study for Sculpture of Nude Woman Balancing Baby
By Chaim Gross
Located in New York, NY
Study for Sculpture of Nude Woman Balancing Baby, 1949, by Chaim Gross (1902-1991) Ink on paper 10 ½ x 7 ½ inches unframed (26.67 x 19.05 cm) 1...
Category

1940s Modern Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Paper, Ink, Pen

Line Color Form Number 1
By Albert Manchak
Located in New York, NY
Line, Color, Form Number 1, 1959, by Albert Manchak (b. 1925) Oil on canvas 35 ½ x 35 ½ inches unframed 37 x 37 inches framed Signed on bottom right Lab...
Category

Mid-20th Century Abstract Geometric Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Oil

Abstract vs. Figurative Watercolor of Marble Sculpture with Engine
By Alain Pino
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Abstract Red, Black & White Watercolor of Marble Sculpture with Engine Unique 100% Original Watercolor Alain Pino’s new works continue his exploration on the intersection between...
Category

2010s Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Watercolor, Archival Paper, Handmade Paper

Rayuela
By Isabel Pena
Located in New York, NY
Isabel Peña Rayuela Photo-painting on parchment paper 46h x 40w in 116.84h x 101.60w cm
Category

2010s Abstract Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Mixed Media

Sunset Grip
By Louisa Chase
Located in New York, NY
Louisa Lizbeth Chase was born in 1951 to Benjamin and Wilda Stengel Chase in Panama City, Panama, where her father, a West Point graduate, was stationed. The family moved to Pennsylv...
Category

20th Century American Modern Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Canvas, Wax, Oil

A SUMMER'S CALL - Mixed Media Resin / Contemporary Landscape
By Susan Goldsmith
Located in New York, NY
Original mixed media work by Susan Goldsmith.
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Resin, Mixed Media, Wood Panel

Untitled (Green Landscape), landscape, bold colors
Located in New York, NY
Oil painting of a grassy landscape with deep greens and browns and a cloudy blue sky with pink accents created with painterly, expressive brush strokes. Russell Sharon was born on a farm in Minnesota. He studied in Mexico City, Boston and New York. He is known for his wildly colorful works with imagery drawn from the Minnesota landscape...
Category

1980s Neo-Expressionist Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Oil, Canvas

SPRING THAW - Pink & Green / Mossy rock / Pacific Northwest Forest
By Alexandra Pacula
Located in New York, NY
Original painting by Alexandra Pacula.
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Mahayana Buddhist Center, NYC
By Neal Slavin
Located in New York, NY
13.25 x 18 inch digital chromogenic print Edition 15 + 3AP Signed, titled, dated and editioned on frame label provided Neal Slavin, a native New Yorker, began photographing groups i...
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Digital

Water Mirror
By Ira Barkoff
Located in Greenwich, CT
Abstract Expressionist seascape oil painting.
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Expressionist Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Ariadne by Jill Moser
By Jill Moser
Located in New York, NY
Jill Moser, Ariadne, 2021 Woodcut print on Khadi 100 % cotton paper Signed and numbered by the artist on recto Paper size: 8.25 x 8 in Edition of 18 Published by Eminence Grise Editions, New York Printed by Andrew Mockler...
Category

2010s Abstract Expressionist Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Woodcut

Untitled from the Series Any Human Heart
By Ana Maria Gastañeta
Located in New York, NY
36" x 24" Edition of 5 +2AP Hahnmühle paper matt fibre 200gr. Archival digital pigment print, unframed. Humans are complex. We are made up of many different layers, oftentimes unwi...
Category

2010s Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Archival Pigment

View from the Empire State Building, Looking South
By Miguel Angel Garcia
Located in New York, NY
40 x 60 inch mineral ink print, framed Signed on label verso Edition 5 Miguel Ángel García was born in Madrid in 1952, and currently lives and works in Cantabria, Spain. A visual ar...
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Archival Pigment

Portrait of a Bewigged Gentleman
By Vittore Ghislandi
Located in New York, NY
Vittore Ghislandi, called Fra Galgario Provenance: Robert L. and Bertina Suida Manning, New York, ca. 1966-1996 Private Collection, USA Exhibited: “Eighteenth Century European Pai...
Category

18th Century Baroque Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Copper

Becoming Us
By Isabel Turban
Located in New York, NY
Isabel Turbán layers paintings with transfers, acrylic, charcoal, and other mixed media onto canvas or paper. Her abstract paintings manifest memory, cultural experience, and politi...
Category

2010s Abstract Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Mixed Media

Grand Canyon National Park, National Park Service
By Neal Slavin
Located in New York, NY
24 x 24 inch digital chromogenic print Edition 15 +3AP Signed, titled, dated and editioned on frame label provided Neal Slavin, a native New Yorker, began photographing groups i...
Category

1970s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Digital

Our story was a ghostly one
By Angela Fraleigh
Located in New York, NY
Signed on verso
Category

2010s Contemporary Fine Art in New York City

Materials

Linen, Oil

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