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Item Ships From: New York
The Ford, by Thomas Creswick
By Thomas Creswick
Located in Long Island City, NY
The Ford, by Thomas Creswick (1811-1869). Oil on canvas. Signed and dated.
Category

1840s Irish Antique New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas

View Along the Thames by George Oberteuffer
Located in Hudson, NY
Oil on board. Painting measures: 14 7/8 x 18 inches with frame it measures: 21 1/4 x 24 1/2 inches.
Category

Early 20th Century Great Britain (UK) New York - Paintings

Materials

Wood

Portrait of a Woman by Francis L. Woodahl
Located in East Hampton, NY
Framed Oil on Board Painting of a woman by Francis L. Woodahl.  
Category

20th Century American New York - Paintings

Materials

Wood

Untitled Painting by Dede Coover
By Dede Coover
Located in NYC, NY
An original, large-scale, abstract oil on canvas painting by American artist Dede Coover, a registered and award winning artist since the 1950s. The artist, native to California, has...
Category

Mid-20th Century American New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas

Italian Portrait in Wooden Frame
Located in Long Island City, NY
Italian Portrait in wooden frame.
Category

20th Century Italian Mid-Century Modern New York - Paintings

Materials

Wood, Paint

Nine Watercolors by Designer Pierre Lottier
By Pierre Lottier
Located in NYC, NY
Set of nine watercolors. The set includes a wide range of interior renderings and furniture designs by renowned Barcelona interior designer Pierre ...
Category

1960s Spanish Vintage New York - Paintings

Materials

Watercolor, Paper

Work Horse Oil Painting by Wouterus Verschuur I
Located in New York, NY
This is our exceptional oil painting on mahogany panel of a work horse in barn by the Dutch master, Wouterus Verschuur I (1812-1874). Panel measures 9 by 13...
Category

Mid-19th Century Dutch Romantic Antique New York - Paintings

Materials

Wood

'Studio 13' Contemporary Artwork by Randy Richard Morales
Located in New York, NY
'Studio 13' Acrylic on Canvas. Contemporary artwork by Randy Richard Morales, 2025.
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Paint

Pruning the Orchard with Brown Ox
Located in Hudson, NY
Chinese gouache painting on paper of farmers tending the land. Signed on the reverse, comes framed.
Category

1970s Chinese Vintage New York - Paintings

Materials

Paper

19th Century Naive Oil on Canvas
Located in Long Island City, NY
19th century naive oil on canvas.
Category

19th Century Antique New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas

Georges Ferrato, "Opaque III" 1985 - Abstract Oil Painting
By Georges Ferrato
Located in New York, NY
- Opaque III by Georges Ferrato - Oil on Canvas - 55 x 94 in, 140 x 240 cm - Signed at bottom right, signed dated and titled on the back Ferrato’s work is often associated with the ...
Category

1980s French Post-Modern Vintage New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Gabriel Shuldiner, Formmx, Black Painting, United States, 2015
By Gabriel J. Shuldiner
Located in New York, NY
With his series of intense black mixed-media paintings, artist Gabriel Shuldiner captures the void simultaneously created by and filled up by technology. By layering the paintings wi...
Category

2010s American New York - Paintings

Materials

Paint

Colorful Abstract Gouache "Serpentine Shapes" by Gio Colucci
By Gio Colucci
Located in Montreal, QC
Gio Colucci, painter, sculptor, ceramist was born in Florence, Italy in 1892. In 1911, he moved to Paris to study architecture at the Fine Art School. Colucci settled in Cairo in 191...
Category

1950s Italian Vintage New York - Paintings

Materials

Paper

Colorful Gouache "Abstract Dancing Nudes" by Gio Colucci
By Gio Colucci
Located in Montreal, QC
Gio Colucci, painter, sculptor, ceramist was born in Florence, Italy in 1892. In 1911, he moved to Paris to study architecture at the Fine Art School. Colucci settled in Cairo in 191...
Category

1950s Italian Vintage New York - Paintings

Materials

Paper

Japanese Two Panel Screen Geometric Design on Mounted Textile
Located in Hudson, NY
In strong primary colors. Makers seal reads: Yu.
Category

Mid-20th Century Japanese New York - Paintings

Materials

Paint

Nicholas Howey "New York Math, " Painting Acrylic on Canvas, United States, 2006
By Nicholas Howey
Located in New York, NY
"New York Math" Acrylic on canvas painting by Nicholas Howey. Signed, dated and titled on back.
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

"Danse Macabre", Oil and Acrylic on Canvas by Kathi Robinson Frank
Located in New York, NY
"Danse Macabre," 2014 by artist Kathi Robinson Frank is from her latest series of large 72" x 56" canvases incorporating oil, acrylic, charcoa, l pastel ...
Category

2010s American Modern New York - Paintings

Materials

Paint

oil on canevas
Located in Brooklyn, NY
original
Category

20th Century European New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas

Architectural Study Painting by Richard Bobby, 1966
By Richard Bobby
Located in Sagaponack, NY
A very large, oil on canvas, rendering of a future building for Crest Corp drawn in 1966 of John F. Kennedy Blvd in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Signed "Richard Bobby 9.66 Crest Corp ...
Category

1960s American Mid-Century Modern Vintage New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas

"Range Top" by Curtis Miller
By Curtis Miller
Located in New York, NY
Oil painting by Curtis Miller titled "Range Top" Signed and dated lower right frame. 1955.
Category

1950s American Vintage New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas

Abstract Mixed Media Collage on Paper by Edith Isaac-Rose
Located in New York, NY
Abstract Mixed Media on Paper Collage by Edith Isaac-Rose (8" x 11" Art on 11" x 14" Paper)
Category

Late 20th Century North American Modern New York - Paintings

Materials

Paper

Mixed Media Painting by Steven Colucci, Sea Series
By Jackson Pollock
Located in New York City, NY
Steven Colucci’s iconoclastic approach to performance and the visual arts have not only long blurred the boundaries between these disciplines, but have challenged its most basic assumptions. The title of this show references a most rudimentary dance move -- the plié -- and our assumptions of what to expect in relation to this. Also the suggestion that we can simply press a button and a preconceived outcome will be courteously delivered -- a form of prefabricated belief in itself. Steven Colucci’s artwork turns such basic assumptions on their heads. Finding early inspiration in the New York school of abstract expressionists such as Jackson Pollock with his action painting, and then further by his professor -- a then young Vito Acconci while studying at the School of Visual Arts, Steven Colucci went from exploring the raw existentialist experimentation of New York’s early painting and performance scenes, to investigating the other end of the spectrum -- the rigorously measured and controlled disciplines of pantomime and ballet; studying in Paris under the tutelage of world-famous Marcelle Marceau, and engaging with the concepts of dramatic movement pioneer and intellectual Etienne Decroux. Colucci has explained the difference between the extremes of pantomime and dance as being that pantomime forces movement via an internal capacity -- movement directed inward to the core of one’s self -- a source requiring extreme mental and physical control. Dance by contrast is an external expression; likewise requiring great precision, although instead an extension of self or sentiment that projects outwardly. While such historical ‘movement’ disciplines serve as foundation blocks for Steven’s artistic explorations, it is the realm in between that he is best known for his contributions -- an experimental movement and performance art that simultaneously honors, yet defiantly refutes tradition; rejecting a compartmentalization regarding art and movement, yet incorporating its elements into his own brand of experimental pastiche. Colucci’s performance works manifest as eerily candy-coated and familiar, yet incorporate unexpected jags of the uncanny throughout, exploiting a sort of coulrophobia in the viewer; an exploration of a cumulative artifice that binds human nature against its darker tendencies; highlighting traditions of artifice itself -- the fabricated systemologies that necessitate compartmentalization in the first place. It is evident in Steven Colucci’s paintings that he has established a uniquely distinctive pictorial vocabulary; a strong allusion to -- or moreso an extension of -- his performance works. Colucci’s paintings depict a sort of kinetic spectrum, or as he refers to them “a technical expression of physicality and movement”. Whereas the French performance and visual artist Yves Klein used the human body as a “paint brush” to demarcate his paintings and thereby signify a residue of performance, Colucci’s utilization of nonsensical numbers and number sequences taken from dance scores, as well as heat-induced image abstraction depicting traces of movement likewise inform his vocabulary. In the strand of the choreographed, yet incorporating moments of chance, Colucci’s paintings represent an over arching structure; a rhythm of being and state, yet detail erratic moments -- moments that denote a certain frailty -- the edge of human stamina. Colucci’s paintings dually represent a form of gestural abstraction -- and also the reverse of this -- a unique anthropomorphization of varying states of movement -- that sometimes present as a temperature induced color field, at others are juxtapositions of movement and depictions of physical gestural images themselves. Colucci’s use of vernacular and found materials such as cardboard evoke his mastery of set design, and also reference a sort of collective experience of urbanity and the ephemeral. Such contradictions seem to permeate not only Steven Colucci’s artwork, but also are reflected in his person -- one who grew up in New York’s Bronx during a zeitgeist moment in visual and performing arts in the 1960s -- one who shifts with ease from happenings and experiments in New York City, to his meticulously choreographed megaproductions at Lincoln Center or starring in the Paris ballet...
Category

2010s New York - Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Joan Shapiro "At Dawn" Gouache on Canvas Board
Located in Astoria, NY
Joan Hyde Shapiro (American, XX - XXI), "At Dawn", Gouache on Canvas Board, signed lower right, titled to verso, white frame. Image: 4.75" H x 6.75" W; frame: 11.50" H x 13.50" W.
Category

20th Century American Craftsman New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Paint

Mixed Media Artwork by Umberto Romano
By Umberto Romano
Located in Sagaponack, NY
A mixed-media artwork with a geometric and gridded drawing on the white background with a bold design of abstracted collaged applications in a graphic and contrasting palette.
Category

1960s American Mid-Century Modern Vintage New York - Paintings

Materials

Paint

Continental School, Painting of a Parrot Perched above an assortment fruit.
Located in Long Island City, NY
Continental School, Painting of a Parrot Perched above an assortment fruit. Dimensions: 30"H x 24"W x 1.75"D Period: 20th Century Condition: Good Condition. Wear consistent with age...
Category

20th Century Mid-Century Modern New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Paint

Pierre-Paul Prud’hon, the Erynies
By Pierre-Paul Prud’hon
Located in New York, NY
The Erynies: Alecto, Tisiphone, Megaera by Pierre-Paul Prud’hon (French, 1758-1823) oil on canvas France, late 18th century Measures: H 10.75; W 6 in,   The Erynies are the th...
Category

18th Century French Antique New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas

Interior Oil Painting
Located in New York, NY
An oil painting on canvas of a 19th century French interior. The artist's attention to detail, use of jewel-tone colors and the capturing of natural light streaming in through the wi...
Category

19th Century French Antique New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas

Artist Diane Petry Textured Canvas Acrylic Painting, Belgium, Contemporary
Located in New York, NY
Contemporary Belgian artist Diane Petry creates her own three layer canvas using pima cotton, gauze and fine paper. Raw edges and applied threads add texture and dimension. All artwo...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Belgian New York - Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Artist Diane Petry Textured Canvas Acrylic Painting, Belgium, Contemporary
Located in New York, NY
Contemporary Belgian artist Diane Petry creates her own three layer canvas using pima cotton, gauze and fine paper. Raw edges and applied threads add texture and dimension. All artwo...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Belgian New York - Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

77" Abstract Oil Painting by Wolf Von Frise
Located in Water Mill, NY
77 x 39 abstract oil painting by Wolf Von Frise in custom frame.
Category

20th Century American New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas

Collage by Paul Shaub
By Paul Shaub
Located in Sagaponack, NY
A boxed, abstract construction of colorful quilled paper by American artist Paul Shaub.
Category

1960s American Vintage New York - Paintings

Materials

Paper

Nicoloi Ciksvsky American, "Coldspring Pond, Southampton Long Island"
Located in Southampton, NY
Nicoloi Ciksvsky American.
Category

1930s American American Craftsman Vintage New York - Paintings

Grey Abstract Acrylic Painting by Arnie Arlow
By Arnie Arlow
Located in Water Mill, NY
50" grey abstract acrylic painting by Arnie Arlow.
Category

20th Century American New York - Paintings

Materials

Acrylic, Canvas

My eyes on you -Mixed Media Painting by Steven Colucci
By Jackson Pollock
Located in New York City, NY
Steven Colucci is a perfectionist. As a painter, he describes himself as “a dictator, a controlling ballet master with a stick,” dispassionately choreographing his composition to achieve the exact result he desires. The paintings of the “Sea Series,” largely completed in 2010, are actually the culmination of 4-5 years of practice for the artist, during which he consistently developed and refined the language and formal elements that visually distinguish the series, sometimes repeating the same image for months until he was satisfied. Colucci’s methods and philosophy reflect his experience with movement as a performing art. While he studied with and admires Vito Acconci, Colucci is no proponent of conceptualism, finding his voice in the intense discipline of traditional forms, explaining, “If you don’t practice art like a classical pianist, every day, you can’t execute your concepts.” After completing his studies at New York’s School of Visual Arts, he moved to Paris, where he studied and performed mime and ballet, working closely with Marcel Marceau, who also painted, and Etienne Decroux, a sculptor as well as the originator of the form “classical mime,” which has roots in the sculpture of Rodin. If the word “sea” in the title of a painting conjures for you images of little easels and landscape canvases featuring sandy beaches, waves, and vast horizons, think again – Colucci’s oceanic visions are experiential, viewing them you are often looking down at the sea, within it, or even dreaming of the ocean. Water, deep or shallow, still or fast-moving, rules how we see light and subjects, as the artist works to reflect what he calls “the spirit, the soul of the water.” In “Deep Blue,” he conjures this anima via a window through levels of roiling currents of rich dark waves and dancing highlights, inviting the viewer to experience the sea as a vibrant and enveloping sensual entity. Colors, too, differ from the subdued palette of the seaside afternoon painter. Often his choices originate in what Colucci describes as the rhythm of color present in Afro-Carribean art and design. In the paintings, these hues express the water’s likeness to the seamless flow of the Dominican culture’s music and dance, which he so enjoys during frequent visits to Upper Manhattan’s El Barrio district, a movement with the melodic line that he so simply and perfectly employs in the delightfully sexy “Swimming with the Fish.” As our bodies, like the sea, are largely water, Colucci’s water visions...
Category

2010s New York - Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Mixed Media Painting by Steven Colucci
By John Byard
Located in New York City, NY
Steven Colucci’s iconoclastic approach to performance and the visual arts have not only long blurred the boundaries between these disciplines, but have challenged its most basic assumptions. The title of this show references a most rudimentary dance move --the plié --and our assumptions of what to expect in relation to this. Also the suggestion that we can simply press a button and a preconceived outcome will be courteously delivered --a form of prefabricated belief in itself. Steven Colucci’s artwork turns such basic assumptions on their heads. Finding early inspiration in the New York school of abstract expressionists such as Jackson Pollock with his action painting, and then further by his professor --a then young Vito Acconci while studying at the School of Visual Arts, Steven Colucci went from exploring the raw existentialist experimentation of New York’s early painting and performance scenes, to investigating the other end of the spectrum --the rigorously measured and controlled disciplines of pantomime and ballet; studying in Paris under the tutelage of world-famous Marcelle Marceau, and engaging with the concepts of dramatic movement pioneer and intellectual Etienne Decroux. Colucci has explained the difference between the extremes of pantomime and dance as being that pantomime forces movement via an internal capacity --movement directed inward to the core of one’s self --a source requiring extreme mental and physical control. Dance by contrast is an external expression; likewise requiring great precision, although instead an extension of self or sentiment that projects outwardly. While such historical ‘movement’ disciplines serve as foundation blocks for Steven’s artistic explorations, it is the realm in between that he is best known for his contributions --an experimental movement and performance art that simultaneously honors, yet defiantly refutes tradition; rejecting a compartmentalization regarding art and movement, yet incorporating its elements into his own brand of experimental pastiche. Colucci’s performance works manifest as eerily candy-coated and familiar, yet incorporate unexpected jags of the uncanny throughout, exploiting a sort of coulrophobia in the viewer; an exploration of a cumulative artifice that binds human nature against its darker tendencies; highlighting traditions of artifice itself - the fabricated systemologies that necessitate compartmentalization in the first place. It is evident in Steven Colucci’s paintings that he has established a uniquely distinctive pictorial vocabulary; a strong allusion to --or moreso an extension of --his performance works. Colucci’s paintings depict a sort of kinetic spectrum, or as he refers to them “a technical expression of physicality and movement”. Whereas the French performance and visual artist Yves Klein used the human body as a “paint brush” to demarcate his paintings and thereby signify a residue of performance, Colucci’s utilization of nonsensical numbers and number sequences taken from dance scores, as well as heat- induced image abstraction depicting traces of movement likewise inform his vocabulary. In the strand of the choreographed, yet incorporating moments of chance, Colucci’s paintings represent an over arching structure; a rhythm of being and state, yet detail erratic moments --moments that denote a certain frailty --the edge of human stamina. Colucci’s paintings dually represent a form of gestural abstraction --and also the reverse of this --a unique anthropomorphization of varying states of movement – that sometimes present as a temperature induced color field, at others are juxtapositions of movement and depictions of physical gestural images themselves. Colucci’s use of vernacular and found materials such as cardboard evoke his mastery of set design, and also reference a sort of collective experience of urbanity and the ephemeral. Such contradictions seem to permeate not only Steven Colucci’s artwork, but also are reflected in his person – one who grew up in New York’s Bronx during a zeitgeist moment in visual and performing arts in the 1960s – one who shifts with ease from happenings and experiments in New York City, to his meticulously choreographed megaproductions at Lincoln Center or starring in the Paris ballet...
Category

2010s New York - Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Sara Skaaning Oil Painting on Board
By Sara Skaaning
Located in New York, NY
Framed oil painting on board by Sara Skaaning. Based in the Island Mon, Denmark, the visual artist Sara Skaaning starts from her surroundings that twists and transforms until complet...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Danish New York - Paintings

Materials

Wood, Paint

French Oil on Canvas Portrait H. Descamps
By Henri Descamps
Located in palm beach, FL
Portrait of the 20th century signed Henri Descamps (1898-1990) Young dark-haired girl seated wearing a white dress with shades of pink and blue with red stripes, hands crossed, and a...
Category

20th Century French New York - Paintings

Materials

Paint

Framed Oil Painting on Board by Sara Skaaning
By Sara Skaaning
Located in New York, NY
Oil painting on board by Sara Skaaning. Based in the Island Mon, Denmark, the visual artist Sara Skaaning starts from her surroundings that twists and transforms until completely di...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Danish Modern New York - Paintings

Materials

Wood, Paint

Framed Oil Painting on Board by Sara Skaaning
By Sara Skaaning
Located in New York, NY
Oil painting on board by Sara Skaaning. Based in the Island Mon, Denmark, the visual artist Sara Skaaning starts from her surroundings that twists and transforms until completely di...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Danish Modern New York - Paintings

Materials

Wood, Paint

Framed Oil Painting on Board by Sara Skaaning
By Sara Skaaning
Located in New York, NY
Oil painting on board by Sara Skaaning. Based in the Island Mon, Denmark, the visual artist Sara Skaaning starts from her surroundings that twists and transforms until completely di...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Danish Modern New York - Paintings

Materials

Wood, Paint

Framed Oil Painting on Board by Sara Skaaning
By Sara Skaaning
Located in New York, NY
Oil painting on board by Sara Skaaning. Based in the Island Mon, Denmark, the visual artist Sara Skaaning starts from her surroundings that twists and transforms until completely di...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Danish Modern New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Paint

Monumental 3 Panel Painting by Cynthia Knapp
Located in New York, NY
Monumental 3 panel painting by Cynthia Knapp (American 20th century) oil on canvas painting of abstract color splashes. The panels can be used together o...
Category

1980s American Modern Vintage New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas

Italian Still Life "Citrus" Oil on Wooden Panel
Located in palm beach, FL
Still life painted on wooden panel. On a table in the center a wicker basket with oranges and orange blossoms, to the left of the composition a silver dish with four large lemons on ...
Category

1950s Italian Renaissance Vintage New York - Paintings

Materials

Wood, Paint

Mixed Media Painting by Steven Colucci- Two Men
By Jeff Koons
Located in New York City, NY
Steven Colucci’s iconoclastic approach to performance and the visual arts have not only long blurred the boundaries between these disciplines, but have challenged its most basic assumptions. The title of this show references a most rudimentary dance move --the plié --and our assumptions of what to expect in relation to this. Also the suggestion that we can simply press a button and a preconceived outcome will be courteously delivered --a form of prefabricated belief in itself. Steven Colucci’s artwork turns such basic assumptions on their heads. Finding early inspiration in the New York school of abstract expressionists such as Jackson Pollock with his action painting, and then further by his professor --a then young Vito Acconci while studying at the School of Visual Arts, Steven Colucci went from exploring the raw existentialist experimentation of New York’s early painting and performance scenes, to investigating the other end of the spectrum --the rigorously measured and controlled disciplines of pantomime and ballet; studying in Paris under the tutelage of world-famous Marcelle Marceau, and engaging with the concepts of dramatic movement pioneer and intellectual Etienne Decroux. Colucci has explained the difference between the extremes of pantomime and dance as being that pantomime forces movement via an internal capacity --movement directed inward to the core of one’s self --a source requiring extreme mental and physical control. Dance by contrast is an external expression; likewise requiring great precision, although instead an extension of self or sentiment that projects outwardly. While such historical ‘movement’ disciplines serve as foundation blocks for Steven’s artistic explorations, it is the realm in between that he is best known for his contributions --an experimental movement and performance art that simultaneously honors, yet defiantly refutes tradition; rejecting a compartmentalization regarding art and movement, yet incorporating its elements into his own brand of experimental pastiche. Colucci’s performance works manifest as eerily candy-coated and familiar, yet incorporate unexpected jags of the uncanny throughout, exploiting a sort of coulrophobia in the viewer; an exploration of a cumulative artifice that binds human nature against its darker tendencies; highlighting traditions of artifice itself - the fabricated systemologies that necessitate compartmentalization in the first place. It is evident in Steven Colucci’s paintings that he has established a uniquely distinctive pictorial vocabulary; a strong allusion to --or moreso an extension of --his performance works. Colucci’s paintings depict a sort of kinetic spectrum, or as he refers to them “a technical expression of physicality and movement”. Whereas the French performance and visual artist Yves Klein used the human body as a “paint brush” to demarcate his paintings and thereby signify a residue of performance, Colucci’s utilization of nonsensical numbers and number sequences taken from dance scores, as well as heat- induced image abstraction depicting traces of movement likewise inform his vocabulary. In the strand of the choreographed, yet incorporating moments of chance, Colucci’s paintings represent an over arching structure; a rhythm of being and state, yet detail erratic moments --moments that denote a certain frailty --the edge of human stamina. Colucci’s paintings dually represent a form of gestural abstraction --and also the reverse of this --a unique anthropomorphization of varying states of movement – that sometimes present as a temperature induced color field, at others are juxtapositions of movement and depictions of physical gestural images themselves. Colucci’s use of vernacular and found materials such as cardboard evoke his mastery of set design, and also reference a sort of collective experience of urbanity and the ephemeral. Such contradictions seem to permeate not only Steven Colucci’s artwork, but also are reflected in his person – one who grew up in New York’s Bronx during a zeitgeist moment in visual and performing arts in the 1960s – one who shifts with ease from happenings and experiments in New York City, to his meticulously choreographed megaproductions at Lincoln Center or starring in the Paris ballet...
Category

2010s New York - Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

French Cubism Oil on Canvas Max F
Located in palm beach, FL
Portrait of a character dressed in red sitting on a chair with crossed arms. On the table to the right is a mask representing an animal’s head, a red headdress can be seen on the sub...
Category

1910s French Vintage New York - Paintings

Materials

Paint

Lady Admiring a Painting by Jules Worms
By Jules Worms
Located in New York, NY
Jules Worms (French, 1832–1914). Lady Admiring a painting. Watercolor. Measures: 15 x 10 in.
Category

19th Century French Antique New York - Paintings

Materials

Paper

Nicholas Howey, Abstract Painting, Watercolor on Paper, US, 2020
By Nicholas Howey
Located in New York, NY
Signed. Nicholas Howey was born in DuBois, PA. in 1948. He studied Undergraduate Art at the University of Pittsburgh and then went on to New York University for Graduate Studies. N...
Category

2010s American New York - Paintings

Materials

Paint, Paper

Post-Modern Pastel Abstraction on Canvas by "LA"
By L.A. Studio
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Make any space a "vibe" with late 20th century west coast style! This genuine post-modern abstract painting features a truly righteous pastel color palette accentuated by flashes of neutral black and or white. Reminiscent of popular old TV...
Category

Late 20th Century American Post-Modern New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Wood, Paint

Print from Late Night Series, Hand-painted Silk Screen Print, US, 1992
By Nicholas Howey
Located in New York, NY
Numbered: 5/40 Signed and dated: Nicholas Howey 92 Nicholas Howey was born in DuBois, PA. in 1948. He studied Undergraduate Art at the University of Pittsburgh and then went on to N...
Category

1990s American New York - Paintings

Materials

Paint, Paper

Print from Late Night Series, Hand-painted Silk Screen Print, US, 1992
By Nicholas Howey
Located in New York, NY
Numbered: 5/40 Signed and dated: Nicholas Howey 92 Nicholas Howey was born in DuBois, PA. in 1948. He studied Undergraduate Art at the University of Pittsburgh and then went on to N...
Category

1990s American New York - Paintings

Materials

Paint, Paper

Dustin Cox "No risk, No story" watercolor painting
Located in Hudson, NY
Toronto-based graphic designer and artist, Dustin Cox, reveals his skill as watercolorist in this delightful mountain landscape, titled "No Risk No Story." Newly framed and signed an...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Canadian Modern New York - Paintings

Materials

Wood

Impressionist Gouache Painting by Andrew McNeile
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Charming gouache painting by contemporary artist Andrew McNeile. Soft lines and colors blend together in a lovely portrait reminiscent of French art nouveau with a bright modern twis...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary American Expressionist New York - Paintings

Materials

Metal

Broadway/Nassau 'A, C' Oil on Canvas Donald Gaja
By Donald Gajadhar
Located in New York, NY
From the Subway series by Donald Gaja (British).
Category

21st Century and Contemporary British New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas

Abstract Swirling Figure Painting
Located in Brooklyn, NY
This vintage painting depicts an abstracted figure in swirling colors. The painting is framed and signed by the artist. Please confirm item location with seller (NY/NJ).
Category

Mid-20th Century Expressionist New York - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Paint

Abstract Swirling Figure Painting
Abstract Swirling Figure Painting
$455 Sale Price
30% Off
Sunshine, Original Upstate New York Landscape with Ashocan Reservoir
By Sunshine
Located in New York, NY
Sunshine was a known local artist in Woodstock and upstate New York area during 1960s. This abstract painting is of Ashocan Reservoir, located in Ulster County, New York. The reservo...
Category

1960s American Mid-Century Modern Vintage New York - Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

Colorful Abstract Gouache "Lovers in Landscape" by Gio Colucci
By Gio Colucci
Located in Montreal, QC
Gio Colucci, painter, sculptor, ceramist was born in Florence, Italy in 1892. In 1911, he moved to Paris to study architecture at the Fine Art School. Colucci settled in Cairo in 191...
Category

1950s Italian Vintage New York - Paintings

Materials

Paper

Japanese Single Wood Panel: Abstract Lines in Red and Gold Lacquer
Located in Hudson, NY
Lacquer and aluminum on wood. Exhibited at Northern Japan Art Exhibition. Signature reads: Yuki.
Category

20th Century Japanese New York - Paintings

Materials

Aluminum

Walter Zoum pastel shades " Quai Vénitiens "
By Walter Zoum
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Located in NY
Category

20th Century French New York - Paintings

Walter Zoum pastel shades " Angles Emboités "
By Walter Zoum
Located in Brooklyn, NY
Located at Center44 222 east 44th street NY
Category

20th Century French New York - Paintings

Mixed Media Painting by Steven Colucci- My eyes on you
By Andrzej Galek
Located in New York City, NY
Steven Colucci’s iconoclastic approach to performance and the visual arts have not only long blurred the boundaries between these disciplines, but have challenged its most basic assumptions. The title of this show references a most rudimentary dance move --the plié --and our assumptions of what to expect in relation to this. Also the suggestion that we can simply press a button and a preconceived outcome will be courteously delivered --a form of prefabricated belief in itself. Steven Colucci’s artwork turns such basic assumptions on their heads. Finding early inspiration in the New York school of abstract expressionists such as Jackson Pollock with his action painting, and then further by his professor --a then young Vito Acconci while studying at the School of Visual Arts, Steven Colucci went from exploring the raw existentialist experimentation of New York’s early painting and performance scenes, to investigating the other end of the spectrum --the rigorously measured and controlled disciplines of pantomime and ballet; studying in Paris under the tutelage of world-famous Marcelle Marceau, and engaging with the concepts of dramatic movement pioneer and intellectual Etienne Decroux. Colucci has explained the difference between the extremes of pantomime and dance as being that pantomime forces movement via an internal capacity --movement directed inward to the core of one’s self --a source requiring extreme mental and physical control. Dance by contrast is an external expression; likewise requiring great precision, although instead an extension of self or sentiment that projects outwardly. While such historical ‘movement’ disciplines serve as foundation blocks for Steven’s artistic explorations, it is the realm in between that he is best known for his contributions --an experimental movement and performance art that simultaneously honors, yet defiantly refutes tradition; rejecting a compartmentalization regarding art and movement, yet incorporating its elements into his own brand of experimental pastiche. Colucci’s performance works manifest as eerily candy-coated and familiar, yet incorporate unexpected jags of the uncanny throughout, exploiting a sort of coulrophobia in the viewer; an exploration of a cumulative artifice that binds human nature against its darker tendencies; highlighting traditions of artifice itself - the fabricated systemologies that necessitate compartmentalization in the first place. It is evident in Steven Colucci’s paintings that he has established a uniquely distinctive pictorial vocabulary; a strong allusion to --or moreso an extension of --his performance works. Colucci’s paintings depict a sort of kinetic spectrum, or as he refers to them “a technical expression of physicality and movement”. Whereas the French performance and visual artist Yves Klein used the human body as a “paint brush” to demarcate his paintings and thereby signify a residue of performance, Colucci’s utilization of nonsensical numbers and number sequences taken from dance scores, as well as heat- induced image abstraction depicting traces of movement likewise inform his vocabulary. In the strand of the choreographed, yet incorporating moments of chance, Colucci’s paintings represent an over arching structure; a rhythm of being and state, yet detail erratic moments --moments that denote a certain frailty --the edge of human stamina. Colucci’s paintings dually represent a form of gestural abstraction --and also the reverse of this --a unique anthropomorphization of varying states of movement – that sometimes present as a temperature induced color field, at others are juxtapositions of movement and depictions of physical gestural images themselves. Colucci’s use of vernacular and found materials such as cardboard evoke his mastery of set design, and also reference a sort of collective experience of urbanity and the ephemeral. Such contradictions seem to permeate not only Steven Colucci’s artwork, but also are reflected in his person – one who grew up in New York’s Bronx during a zeitgeist moment in visual and performing arts in the 1960s – one who shifts with ease from happenings and experiments in New York City, to his meticulously choreographed megaproductions at Lincoln Center or starring in the Paris ballet...
Category

2010s New York - Paintings

Materials

Acrylic

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