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Item Ships From: Phoenix
Crow Before The Eagle by Greg Singley
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Greg Singley , born 1950-
Artist Statement:
When the sun sets in the desert South West, things appear. This is the nature of what touches me about that la...
Category
2010s Contemporary Phoenix - Art
Materials
Oil
Traces II
By Bryan David Griffith
Located in Phoenix, AZ
smoke from an open flame accumulated in encaustic beeswax on panel
b. 1975
My work explores the idea that dualities—light and darkness, life and dea...
Category
2010s Outsider Art Phoenix - Art
Materials
Wax, Encaustic, Panel, Wood Panel
1978 (red)
By Mala Breuer
Located in Phoenix, AZ
oil and wax on linen
1927 - 2017
Mala Breuer grew up attending classes in painting and drawing from a young age at the California College of Arts and Crafts. After high school she ...
Category
1970s Abstract Phoenix - Art
Materials
Wax, Oil
Untitled F (diptych)
By George Thiewes
Located in Phoenix, AZ
charcoal on paper
20 x 15.5 x 1.5 inches each (framed)
In the fields of sculpture and drawing, George Thiewes creates sharp, angular work with a focus on the interaction of light a...
Category
2010s Minimalist Phoenix - Art
Materials
Charcoal, Archival Paper
Level
By Jake Fischer
Located in Phoenix, AZ
oil on panel
b. 1985, Phoenix, AZ
Jake Fischer, born and raised in Phoenix, Arizona, graduated with a Master of Fine Art from Arizona State University in Drawing and Painting. Whil...
Category
2010s Abstract Phoenix - Art
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
12.1.98
By Mala Breuer
Located in Phoenix, AZ
acrylic on canvas
Mala Breuer grew up attending classes in painting and drawing from a young age at the California College of Arts and Crafts. After high school she attended the, no...
Category
1990s Color-Field Phoenix - Art
Materials
Canvas, Acrylic
Western Flare
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Western Flare
Terrence Moore
Photograph, Archival Pigment Print
Size: 23 x 34.5 inches
SPECIAL EDITION OF 25, PRICE FOR THE HOLIDAYS
Terrence Moore ha...
Category
1970s Contemporary Phoenix - Art
Materials
Archival Pigment
Untitled (WOP-5)
By Daniel Brice
Located in Phoenix, AZ
oil on paper
image size: 20.5 x 29.5 inches
Daniel Brice’s paintings are composed using a minimal rectilinear language, divided into planes of color implying vast spatial landscape...
Category
2010s Color-Field Phoenix - Art
Materials
Paper, Oil
Cantamar
By Woods Davy
Located in Phoenix, AZ
stone on granite pedestal
b. 1949, Washington, DC
Woods Davy has completed over 35 large scale commissions including works for -Carlton Highlands in Lake Tahoe, CA; Cedars-Sinai Hos...
Category
2010s Minimalist Phoenix - Art
Materials
Stone, Granite
7.79 (white)
By Mala Breuer
Located in Phoenix, AZ
oil and wax on canvas
Mala Breuer grew up attending classes in painting and drawing from a young age at the California College of Arts and Crafts. After high school she attended ...
Category
1970s Abstract Expressionist Phoenix - Art
Materials
Canvas, Wax, Oil
Coscolina Con Muerto (Flirt With Death)
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Coscolina Con Muerto (Flirt With Death) 1986
Stone Lithograph Edition 35/50
Size: 26.75 x 21 inches
Frame size: 44.75 x 39
Luis Alfonso Jimenez
Born, 1940, El Paso, Texas, died 2006, Hondo, New Mexico.
Statement: Luis Jimenez, in his work, celebrates the vitality of life. . . . Jimenez es un hijo de la frontera; he knows its people and the landscape. It is the transformation of these people into art that is his most important contribution to the art of this vast region which stretches between Mexico and the United States.
His subject matter utilizes the popular images of the cultura del norte, and a large part of it is depicted and transformed in the rough and tumble world of la frontera. He is also a son of el norte, and so he uses its materials and explores its emerging, popular myths. The tension and attraction of Jimnez’s work is that he always creates within the space of his two worlds, the Mexicano and the Americano. He constantly shows us the irony of the two forces which repel, while showing us glimpses of the synthesis he seeks. What a gift it has been to us for this talented artist to reflect on the soul of our region. He gives meaning to our existence and history.
Rudolfo Anaya (passage chosen by the artist), A View from La Frontera, Man on Fire: Luis Jimnez, pp. 1, 3, 6Biography: Luis Jimnez was born in Texas to parents who had emigrated from Mexico to the United States; he would later dedicate his 1989 sculpture Border Crossing to his father, who had entered the country illegally. The elder Jimnez was a neon sign designer in El Paso, and Luis worked with him as a youth. His experience working in the neon shop and his fascination with U.S. car culture would both become major influences on his art career.
Jimenez studied architecture at the University of Texas, Austin (UTA), and also took art courses in which he first created sculptures with wood, steel, and fiberglass, choosing the latter because of its association with U.S. popular culture. He subsequently became one of the artists who made fiberglass an acceptable medium in the 1960s. In 1964 Jimenez received his B.S. in art from UTA, and he continued his studies at the Universidad Nacional Autnoma de Mexico in Mexico City.
In 1966 he moved to New York City and worked as an assistant to sculptor Seymour Lipton. Jimnez began to exhibit his art while in New York and in 1972 moved to New Mexico to focus on creating public sculptures, even as he maintained his diverse output of drawings, prints, and lithographs.
Drawing on his early experiences, Jimnez creates works that come from a border perspective, one that draws upon the hybridity bred by culture clashes. Often socially and politically informed, his works speak not only in regional terms, those germane to the southwestern...
Category
1980s Contemporary Phoenix - Art
Materials
Lithograph
Bronco
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Luis Alfonso Jimenez
Born, 1940, El Paso, Texas, died 2006, Hondo, New Mexico.
Statement: Luis Jimenez, in his work, celebrates the vitality of life. . . . Jimenez es un hijo de la frontera; he knows its people and the landscape. It is the transformation of these people into art that is his most important contribution to the art of this vast region which stretches between Mexico and the United States.
His subject matter utilizes the popular images of the cultura del norte, and a large part of it is depicted and transformed in the rough and tumble world of la frontera. He is also a son of el norte, and so he uses its materials and explores its emerging, popular myths. The tension and attraction of Jimnez’s work is that he always creates within the space of his two worlds, the Mexicano and the Americano. He constantly shows us the irony of the two forces which repel, while showing us glimpses of the synthesis he seeks. What a gift it has been to us for this talented artist to reflect on the soul of our region. He gives meaning to our existence and history.
Rudolfo Anaya (passage chosen by the artist), A View from La Frontera, Man on Fire: Luis Jimnez, pp. 1, 3, 6Biography: Luis Jimnez was born in Texas to parents who had emigrated from Mexico to the United States; he would later dedicate his 1989 sculpture Border Crossing to his father, who had entered the country illegally. The elder Jimnez was a neon sign designer in El Paso, and Luis worked with him as a youth. His experience working in the neon shop and his fascination with U.S. car culture would both become major influences on his art career.
Jimenez studied architecture at the University of Texas, Austin (UTA), and also took art courses in which he first created sculptures with wood, steel, and fiberglass, choosing the latter because of its association with U.S. popular culture. He subsequently became one of the artists who made fiberglass an acceptable medium in the 1960s. In 1964 Jimenez received his B.S. in art from UTA, and he continued his studies at the Universidad Nacional Autnoma de Mexico in Mexico City.
In 1966 he moved to New York City and worked as an assistant to sculptor Seymour Lipton. Jimnez began to exhibit his art while in New York and in 1972 moved to New Mexico to focus on creating public sculptures, even as he maintained his diverse output of drawings, prints, and lithographs.
Drawing on his early experiences, Jimnez creates works that come from a border perspective, one that draws upon the hybridity bred by culture clashes. Often socially and politically informed, his works speak not only in regional terms, those germane to the southwestern United States, but to broader, more global issues as well. They exhibit a profoundly Chicano aesthetic and sensibility, one that is informed by Mexican and Mexican American traditions, North American popular culture, Chicano cultural icons, and images and themes unique to the Southwest. Death, sexuality, and the struggle of the common people are frequent themes.
Inspired by authors who write in an autobiographical style, Jimnez creates works that function as personal narrative yet are also able to make statements about culture in more global terms. His use of bold colors and lines, a legacy from his fathers work as a neon sign maker, lends a dynamic sensuality to his work, one that is particularly evident in his monumental fiberglass and acrylic urethane sculptural works
Many of Jimnezs works correspond to scholar Toms Ybarra-Fraustos definition of the Chicano aesthetic of rasquachismo, a lowbrow sensibility that appeals to the working class in that it applies to objects that subvert expressions of the mainstream or dominant culture. Creating art that speaks to the people, Jimnez is able to transform regional and culturally specific myths and symbols into globally recognized and relevant icons.
Exhibitions:
In addition to his personal work, Jimnez has been commissioned for numerous public art projects. In 1999 his sculpture Southwest Piet was designated a National Treasure by First Lady Hillary Clinton.
The many exhibitions featuring his work have included Human Concern/Personal Torment (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, 1969).
The First International Motorcycle Art Show (Phoenix Art Museum, Phoenix, AZ, 1973).
Three Texas Artists (Centre Cultural Americaine, USIS, Paris, 1977),
Recent Trends in Collecting (Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC, 1982).
Committed to Print (Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1989)
Printmaking in Texas: The 1980s (Modern Art Museum, Fort Worth, TX.
Laguna Gloria Art Museum, Austin, 1990.
The Whitney Biennial (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, 1991)
Man On Fire: Luis Jimnez (Albuquerque Museum of Art, NM, 1994-95).
47th Annual Purchase Exhibition (American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York, 1995).
Traveling solo exhibition, Working Class Heroes: Images from the Popular Culture (1997-2000).
Jiménez
Collier Gallery has been in continuous operation for over 40 years. Originally located just off Main Street in downtown Scottsdale, Arizona, we have moved to Phoenix to accommodate and showcase our large inventory including:
• Original works by Maynard Dixon, Lon Megargee, Ed Mell, Fritz Scholder, Bill Schenck, Bill Lesch, Luis Jimenez, Greg
Singley, Dan Budnik, and other 20th century Western, WPA and Contemporary Southwestern artists.
• The Fine Art Estate of Lon Megargee
• Vintage rodeo...
Category
1970s Contemporary Phoenix - Art
Materials
Lithograph
7.31.98
By Mala Breuer
Located in Phoenix, AZ
acrylic on canvas
Mala Breuer grew up attending classes in painting and drawing from a young age at the California College of Arts and Crafts. After high school she attended the, ...
Category
1990s Color-Field Phoenix - Art
Materials
Canvas, Acrylic
After Picasso
By Devorah Sperber
Located in Phoenix, AZ
5024 spools of thread, aluminum ball chain and hanging apparatus, clear acrylic sphere, steel stand, edition 1 of 1
Devorah Sperber’s work exists at the intersection of art, science...
Category
21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Phoenix - Art
Materials
Metal, Steel
Four Cubic Circles in Broken Light Greys
By Jan Maarten Voskuil
Located in Phoenix, AZ
acrylic on linen
b. 1964, Arnhem
Jan Maarten Voskuil stretches his paintings into the third dimension. His crafted, partly curved wooden constructions are based on simple geometric...
Category
2010s Abstract Geometric Phoenix - Art
Materials
Linen, Acrylic
Acrobat
By Dion Johnson
Located in Phoenix, AZ
acrylic on canvas
b. 1975, Bellaire, OH
Dion Johnson’s paintings combine and explore dynamic opposites: expansiveness and compression, surface and depth, and darkness and light. G...
Category
2010s Abstract Phoenix - Art
Materials
Acrylic, Canvas
11.2.96
By Mala Breuer
Located in Phoenix, AZ
oil and wax on linen
Mala Breuer grew up attending classes in painting and drawing from a young age at the California College of Arts and Crafts. After high school she attended th...
Category
1990s Abstract Phoenix - Art
Materials
Canvas, Linen, Wax, Oil
Liminal 1510
By Bryan David Griffith
Located in Phoenix, AZ
accumulated smoke (carbon pigment) on paper
10 x 10 inches; image size / 21.25 x 17.25 x 1.25 inches; framed
Bryan David Griffith's work explores the idea that dualities—light and ...
Category
2010s Minimalist Phoenix - Art
Materials
Paper, Other Medium
Regalia Before The Consul by Greg Singley
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Greg Singley , born 1950-
Artist Statement:
When the sun sets in the desert South West, things appear. This is the nature of what touches me about that la...
Category
2010s Contemporary Phoenix - Art
Materials
Oil
1979 (70x40)
By Mala Breuer
Located in Phoenix, AZ
painting on canvas
Mala Breuer grew up attending classes in painting and drawing from a young age at the California College of Arts and Crafts. After high school she attended the...
Category
1970s Minimalist Phoenix - Art
Materials
Canvas, Paint
Listing Panes
By Jake Fischer
Located in Phoenix, AZ
oil on panel
b. 1985, Phoenix, AZ
Jake Fischer, born and raised in Phoenix, Arizona, graduated with a Master of Fine Art from Arizona State University in Drawing and Painting. Whil...
Category
2010s Minimalist Phoenix - Art
Materials
Oil, Panel, Wood Panel
Shrouded
By Jake Fischer
Located in Phoenix, AZ
oil on panel
b. 1985, Phoenix, AZ
Jake Fischer, born and raised in Phoenix, Arizona, graduated with a Master of Fine Art from Arizona State University in Drawing and Painting. Whil...
Category
2010s Land Phoenix - Art
Materials
Panel, Oil, Wood Panel
Hopi by Lon Megargee, Original Signed Block Print ca. 1920s
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Title: Hopi ca. 1920s
Artist: Lon Megargee
Medium: Block Print
Size: 11 x 11 inches (Sight Measurement)
Creator of Stetson's hat logo "Last Drop from his Hat"
Image of Lon Megargee not included in purchase.
Lon Megargee
1883 - 1960
At age 13, Lon Megargee came to Phoenix in 1896 following the death of his father in Philadelphia. For several years he resided with relatives while working at an uncle’s dairy farm and at odd jobs. He returned to Philadelphia in 1898 – 1899 in order to attend drawing classes at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Back in Phoenix in 1899, he decided at the age of 16 to try to make his living as a cowboy.
Lon moved to the cow country of Wickenburg, Arizona where he was hired by Tex Singleton’s Bull Ranch. He later joined the Three Bar R. . . and after a few years, was offered a job by Billy Cook of the T.T. Ranch near New River. By 1906, Megargee had learned his trade well enough to be made foreman of Cook’s outfit.
Never shy about taking risks, Lon soon left Cook to try his own hand at ranching. He partnered with a cowpuncher buddy, Tom Cavness, to start the El Rancho Cinco Uno at New River. Unfortunately, the young partners could not foresee a three-year drought that would parch Arizona, costing them their stock and then their hard-earned ranch.
Breaking with his romantic vision of cowboy life, Megargee finally turned to art full time. He again enrolled at the Pennsylvania Academy of Art and then the Los Angeles School of Art and Design during 1909 – 1910. The now well-trained student took his first trip to paint “en plein air” (outdoors) to the land of Hopi and Navajo peoples in northern Arizona. After entering paintings from this trip in the annual Territorial Fair at Phoenix, in 1911, he surprisingly sold his first oil painting to a major enterprise – the Santa Fe Railroad . . . Lon received $50 for “Navajos Watching the Santa Fe Train.” He soon sold the SFRR ten paintings over the next two years. For forty years the railroad was his most important client, purchasing its last painting from him in 1953.
In a major stroke of good fortune during his early plein-air period, Megargee had the opportunity to paint with premier artist, William R. Leigh (1866 – 1955). Leigh furnished needed tutoring and counseling, and his bright, impressionistic palette served to enhance the junior artist’s sense of color and paint application. In a remarkable display of unabashed confidence and personable salesmanship, Lon Megargee, at age 30, forever linked his name with Arizona art history. Despite the possibility of competition from better known and more senior artists, he persuaded Governor George Hunt and the Legislature in 1913 to approve 15 large, historic and iconic murals for the State Capitol Building in Phoenix. After completing the murals in 1914, he was paid the then princely sum of roughly $4000. His Arizona statehood commission would launch Lon to considerable prominence at a very early point in his art career.
Following a few years of art schooling in Los Angeles, and several stints as an art director with movie studios, including Paramount, Megargee turned in part to cover illustrations for popular Western story magazines in the 1920s.
In the 1920s, as well, Lon began making black and white prints of Western types and of genre scenes from woodblocks. These prints he generally signed and sold singly. In 1933, he published a limited edition, signed and hard-cover book (about 250 copies and today rare)containing a group of 28 woodblock images. Titled “The Cowboy Builds a Loop,” the prints are noteworthy for strong design, excellent draftsmanship, humanistic and narrative content, and quality. Subjects include Southwest Indians and cowboys, Hispanic men and women, cattle, horses, burros, pioneers, trappers, sheepherders, horse traders, squaw men and ranch polo players. Megargee had a very advanced design sense for simplicity and boldness which he demonstrated in how he used line and form. His strengths included outstanding gestural (action) art and strong figurative work. He was superb in design, originality and drawing, as a study of his prints in the Hays collection reveals.
In 1944, he published a second group of Western prints under the same title as the first. Reduced to 16 images from the original 28 subjects, and slightly smaller, Lon produced these prints in brown ink on a heavy, cream-colored stock. He designed a sturdy cardboard folio to hold each set. For the remainder of his life, Lon had success selling these portfolios to museum stores, art fairs and shows, and to the few galleries then selling Western art.
Drawing on real working and life experiences, Lon Megargee had a comprehensive knowledge, understanding and sensitivity for Southwestern subject matter. Noted American modernist, Lew Davis...
Category
1920s American Impressionist Phoenix - Art
Materials
Woodcut
Love Honor Obey?
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Love Honor Obey?
Lon Megargee
ca. 1940
Oil on Board
Size: 19.75 x 26.75 inches
Frame: 26.75 x 33.75 inches
signed lower right
Painting is framed
Creator...
Category
1940s American Impressionist Phoenix - Art
Materials
Oil
Champion by Billy Schenck
By Bill Schenck
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Champion 1979
Billy Schenck
Serigraph
Image size: 16 x 27 inches
Billy Schenck has been known internationally for 44 years as one of the originators of the contemporary "Pop" wester...
Category
1980s Contemporary Phoenix - Art
Materials
Screen
The Bronc by Lon Megargee
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Lon Megargee 1883-1960
"The Bronc"
Wood block print
Signed in plate, lower right
Image size: 9 x 10 inches
Frame size 21 x 21.5 inches
Creator of Stetson's hat logo "Last Drop from his Hat"
Lon Megargee
1883 - 1960
At age 13, Lon Megargee came to Phoenix in 1896 following the death of his father in Philadelphia. For several years he resided with relatives while working at an uncle’s dairy farm and at odd jobs. He returned to Philadelphia in 1898 – 1899 in order to attend drawing classes at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Back in Phoenix in 1899, he decided at the age of 16 to try to make his living as a cowboy.
Lon moved to the cow country of Wickenburg, Arizona where he was hired by Tex Singleton’s Bull Ranch. He later joined the Three Bar R. . . and after a few years, was offered a job by Billy Cook of the T.T. Ranch near New River. By 1906, Megargee had learned his trade well enough to be made foreman of Cook’s outfit.
Never shy about taking risks, Lon soon left Cook to try his own hand at ranching. He partnered with a cowpuncher buddy, Tom Cavness, to start the El Rancho Cinco Uno at New River. Unfortunately, the young partners could not foresee a three-year drought that would parch Arizona, costing them their stock and then their hard-earned ranch.
Breaking with his romantic vision of cowboy life, Megargee finally turned to art full time. He again enrolled at the Pennsylvania Academy of Art and then the Los Angeles School of Art and Design during 1909 – 1910. The now well-trained student took his first trip to paint “en plein air” (outdoors) to the land of Hopi and Navajo peoples in northern Arizona. After entering paintings from this trip in the annual Territorial Fair at Phoenix, in 1911, he surprisingly sold his first oil painting to a major enterprise – the Santa Fe Railroad . . . Lon received $50 for “Navajos Watching the Santa Fe Train.” He soon sold the SFRR ten paintings over the next two years. For forty years the railroad was his most important client, purchasing its last painting from him in 1953.
In a major stroke of good fortune during his early plein-air period, Megargee had the opportunity to paint with premier artist, William R. Leigh (1866 – 1955). Leigh furnished needed tutoring and counseling, and his bright, impressionistic palette served to enhance the junior artist’s sense of color and paint application. In a remarkable display of unabashed confidence and personable salesmanship, Lon Megargee, at age 30, forever linked his name with Arizona art history. Despite the possibility of competition from better known and more senior artists, he persuaded Governor George Hunt and the Legislature in 1913 to approve 15 large, historic and iconic murals for the State Capitol Building in Phoenix. After completing the murals in 1914, he was paid the then princely sum of roughly $4000. His Arizona statehood commission would launch Lon to considerable prominence at a very early point in his art career.
Following a few years of art schooling in Los Angeles, and several stints as an art director with movie studios, including Paramount, Megargee turned in part to cover illustrations for popular Western story magazines in the 1920s.
In the 1920s, as well, Lon began making black and white prints of Western types and of genre scenes from woodblocks. These prints he generally signed and sold singly. In 1933, he published a limited edition, signed and hard-cover book (about 250 copies and today rare)containing a group of 28 woodblock images. Titled “The Cowboy Builds a Loop,” the prints are noteworthy for strong design, excellent draftsmanship, humanistic and narrative content, and quality. Subjects include Southwest Indians and cowboys, Hispanic men and women, cattle, horses, burros, pioneers, trappers, sheepherders, horse traders, squaw men and ranch polo players. Megargee had a very advanced design sense for simplicity and boldness which he demonstrated in how he used line and form. His strengths included outstanding gestural (action) art and strong figurative work. He was superb in design, originality and drawing, as a study of his prints in the Hays collection reveals.
In 1944, he published a second group of Western prints under the same title as the first. Reduced to 16 images from the original 28 subjects, and slightly smaller, Lon produced these prints in brown ink on a heavy, cream-colored stock. He designed a sturdy cardboard folio to hold each set. For the remainder of his life, Lon had success selling these portfolios to museum stores, art fairs and shows, and to the few galleries then selling Western art.
Drawing on real working and life experiences, Lon Megargee had a comprehensive knowledge, understanding and sensitivity for Southwestern subject matter. Noted American modernist, Lew Davis...
Category
Early 20th Century American Impressionist Phoenix - Art
Materials
Woodcut
Dragon Fly by Greg Singley
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Greg Singley , born 1950-
Artist Statement:
When the sun sets in the desert South West, things appear. This is the nature of what touches me about that la...
Category
2010s Contemporary Phoenix - Art
Materials
Oil
Triptych (left panel)
By Jake Fischer
Located in Phoenix, AZ
oil on panel
b. 1985, Phoenix, AZ
Jake Fischer, born and raised in Phoenix, Arizona, graduated with a Master of Fine Art from Arizona State University in Drawing and Painting. Whil...
Category
2010s Minimalist Phoenix - Art
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
Interpermeate IIII
By Jake Fischer
Located in Phoenix, AZ
oil on panel
b. 1985, Phoenix, AZ
Jake Fischer, born and raised in Phoenix, Arizona, graduated with a Master of Fine Art from Arizona State University in Drawing and Painting. Whil...
Category
2010s Abstract Phoenix - Art
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
Interpermeate III
By Jake Fischer
Located in Phoenix, AZ
oil on panel
b. 1985, Phoenix, AZ
Jake Fischer, born and raised in Phoenix, Arizona, graduated with a Master of Fine Art from Arizona State University in Drawing and Painting. Whil...
Category
2010s Minimalist Phoenix - Art
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
Interpermeate II
By Jake Fischer
Located in Phoenix, AZ
oil on panel
b. 1985, Phoenix, AZ
Jake Fischer, born and raised in Phoenix, Arizona, graduated with a Master of Fine Art from Arizona State University in Drawing and Painting. Whil...
Category
2010s Minimalist Phoenix - Art
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
Interpermeate I
By Jake Fischer
Located in Phoenix, AZ
oil on panel
b. 1985, Phoenix, AZ
Jake Fischer, born and raised in Phoenix, Arizona, graduated with a Master of Fine Art from Arizona State University in Drawing and Painting. Whil...
Category
2010s Minimalist Phoenix - Art
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
Henry Gasser Watercolor French Subject "Apertif, Paris"
By Henry Martin Gasser
Located in Phoenix, AZ
This is a beautiful watercolor on board by New Jersey artist Henry Gasser, N.A. (1909-1981).
Titled on the verso: “Apertif, Paris.” The painting measures 10"h x 8"w.
Signed “H. Gasse...
Category
20th Century Phoenix - Art
Materials
Watercolor, Gouache
Paolo Soleri Cast Bronze Bell Windchime Sculpture
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Beautiful bronze Cosanti bell by Paolo Soleri. In wonderful condition with a lovely patina. Signed and very unique. Measures 22 inches high. Bell is 5 inches high and 4 inches across...
Category
Late 20th Century Phoenix - Art
Materials
Bronze
Stratosphere
By Dion Johnson
Located in Phoenix, AZ
acrylic on canvas
b. 1975, Bellaire, OH
Dion Johnson’s paintings combine and explore dynamic opposites: expansiveness and compression, surface and depth, and darkness and light. G...
Category
2010s Abstract Phoenix - Art
Materials
Acrylic, Canvas
Hwy 101 CA.
By George Thiewes
Located in Phoenix, AZ
gouache on paper
61.25 x 39 x 1.5 inches framed
In the fields of sculpture and drawing, George Thiewes creates sharp, angular work with a focus on the interaction of light and dar...
Category
Early 2000s Minimalist Phoenix - Art
Materials
Paper, Gouache
P.E. Guerin, New York Bronze Mercury - 19th Century
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Pierre Emmanuel Guerin, (American, NY, NY born France, 1833-1911).
Large PE Guerin foundry bronze casting of Mercury. Measures 36"h x 11"w x 8" across.
Rests on a decorative bronze...
Category
19th Century Phoenix - Art
Materials
Bronze
Elizabeth O’neill Verner Original Etching, Circa 1928, Charleston
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Original etching by well-known Charleston, SC artist Elizabeth O’Neill Verner.
Title: “In the Shadow of St. Michael’s - Charleston”
Measures: 9 7/8 x 7 3/4 image size. 17 7/8 x 13 7...
Category
1920s Phoenix - Art
Materials
Paper
#5298
By Hiro Yokose
Located in Phoenix, AZ
oil and gold leaf on porcelain tile
Neoromantic painter Hiro Yokose fuses multiple layers of wax and oil paint to create mysterious, veiled landscapes illuminated with flashes of li...
Category
2010s Abstract Phoenix - Art
Materials
Gold, Gold Leaf
Downward
By Jake Fischer
Located in Phoenix, AZ
oil on panel
b. 1985, Phoenix, AZ
Jake Fischer, born and raised in Phoenix, Arizona, graduated with a Master of Fine Art from Arizona State University in Drawing and Painting. Whil...
Category
2010s Contemporary Phoenix - Art
Materials
Oil, Panel, Wood Panel
Original Pencil Signed Etching - Sound of the Sea
By Karl Schrag
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Original pencil signed etching and aquatint by Karl Schrag, 1958.
In excellent condition - neither matted nor framed. No. 1 of the edition of 50.
Image measures 19 7/8 x 27 3/4 inche...
Category
Mid-20th Century Phoenix - Art
Materials
Paper, Etching
Robert Cottingham Color Woodblock, 1992, Rolling Stock #27
By Robert Cottingham
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Robert Cottingham (b. 1935) “Rolling Stock #27."
Woodbock, 1992.
26 blocks, 40 colors.
Image Measures: 10 1/4" H x 13 ½" W.
Edition: 100.
Robert Cottingham is an American Pop-artis...
Category
Late 20th Century Phoenix - Art
Materials
Paper
Cecil Crosley Bell Pen & Ink Drawing with Watercolor - New York Market
By Cecil Crosley Bell
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Cecil Crosley Bell (1906-1970) Pen & ink with watercolor.
The artist’s blind stamp reading “Cecil C. Bell” is seen lower left.
The work is also signed in ink “C.Bell” lower right.
...
Category
Mid-20th Century Phoenix - Art
Materials
Ink, Watercolor
Rolph Scarlett Original Watercolor Dated 1952, Geometric Abstraction
By Rolph Scarlett
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Abstract watercolor by Rolph Scarlett, signed lower left.
A great example by Scarlett. Measures: 19" H x 21" W image size.
New modernist custom-made frame. Size: 24 1/4" H x 26 3/4" ...
Category
Mid-20th Century Phoenix - Art
Materials
Paper
Color Woodblock Print - Apres La Danse "Celebes"
By Paul Jacoulet
Located in Phoenix, AZ
This beautiful color woodblock print by Paul Jacoulet was printed in 1940.
This limited-edition work is numbered on the verso: 102 from the edit...
Category
Mid-20th Century Phoenix - Art
Materials
Woodcut
The Navigator (Small)
By Michael David
Located in Phoenix, AZ
encaustic on panel
b. 1954, Reno Nevada
Michael David is best known for his use of encaustic on large abstract paintings. A practitioner of Abstract Expressionism, David layers bees...
Category
2010s Abstract Expressionist Phoenix - Art
Materials
Wood, Panel, Wax, Oil
KPM Porcelain Tile Female Portrait Signed Wagner - 19th Century
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Beautifully Painted Porcelain tile signed “Wagner” lower right.
The work rests in an ornate gilded frame with a rose-colored velvet liner.
The work is in mint condition with no repai...
Category
Late 19th Century Phoenix - Art
Materials
Ceramic
Down to the Valley by Bill Schenck
By Bill Schenck
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Down in the Valley
Bill Schenck
Serigraph 46/50
Edition of 50
Image size: 25 x 29 inches
Paper size: 31 x 35 inches
UNFRAMED!!
Free Shipping Continental US
The artist, Billy Sch...
Category
1990s Contemporary Phoenix - Art
Materials
Screen
Okiie Hashimoto Color woodblock, 1952. "Girl with Irises"
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Okiie Hashimoto Color woodblock, 1952. "Girl with Irises"
A beautiful composition by Japanese print artist Okiie Hashimoto (1899-1993).
This original color woodblock is in excellent condition and measures 15"h x 21 1/4"w.
The work is framed nicely and measures 25 3/4"h x 30 3/4"w framed.
Pencil signed and dated ‘52 lower right. Titled “Girl with Irises” (Awame To Shojo).
Okiie Hashimoto (1899–1993) was a Japanese artist and educator. Best known as part of the postwar revival of the sosaku-hanga (Creative Prints) movement. In 1936, he began creating woodblock prints after he attended a workshop organized by prominent sosaku-hanga artist Un’ichi Hiratsuka and began creating woodblock prints.
In his prolific career in printmaking, he was known for an innovative use of simplified and decorative forms that exude a modern feel.
In his lifetime, his achievements were rewarded with his appointment to the president of the Japan Print Association (1974–79) and his invitations to the prestigious international prints biennales in Tokyo (1957, 1970, 1972) and Lugano (1972).
In 1921, he began a three-year teacher's training course at the Tokyo School of Fine Arts (the present Tokyo University of the Arts), graduating in 1924. In Tokyo, aside from the art teacher education courses, he received training in a wide variety of practices, including yoga (Western-style painting), nihonga (Japanese-style painting), sculpture, design, etching and lithography, crafts, and calligraphy. In 1955, he began to pursue a career as an artist full-time.
As for influences, Hashimoto cited Hiratsuka, Henri Matisse, André Derain, Maurice de Vlaminck, Kanji Maeda, and Masao Maeda...
Category
1950s Phoenix - Art
Materials
Paper
All the Summers are Hers
By Louise Blyton
Located in Phoenix, AZ
b. Melbourne, Australia
Louise Blyton is a reductive artist exploring the romance of raw linen and dry pigment. The artist’s geometrically shaped canvases explore color, light, and form through the visual language of Reductivism, an aesthetic style characterized by streamlined compositions, restricted color, and a reduction of form and means. Identifying with Reductivism’s simplicity, Blyton’s shaped canvases and three-dimensional wall sculptures elevate craftsmanship and process, achieving a compositional clarity that unifies color and form.
To construct her works, Blyton covers custom built balsa wood stretchers with raw linen, adorning them with layers of pure pigment or acrylic paint. Each pigment reacts differently to raw linen and requires a specific number of coats to reach the artist’s desired level of saturation. As the artist explains, “I’m always looking for a kind of quietness and harmony when making my works even if the color being used is loud.”
The artist creates her own spatial dimension by manipulating the shape of the canvas, which escapes from the flat surface of the wall, confusing its role as a painting. “Rather than responding to the architecture they ask particular attributes of the building to act as support,” as some works appear to climb the surface of the walls, while others straddle columns and corners.
Louise Blyton lives and works in Melbourne, Australia. She graduated with a Bachelor of Fine Art at RMIT University, Melbourne, Australia in 1988. Her works are held in significant corporate and private collections in Australia, China, France, United Kingdom, Portugal, and the United States. Since 2000, Blyton has run an artist supply store called, St. Luke Artist Colourman, which specializes in professional paint and raw materials, with her husband David Coles.
Category
2010s Abstract Geometric Phoenix - Art
Materials
Linen, Acrylic
Emil Bisttram Taos School Transcendental Painter Abstract Watercolor
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Outstanding abstract watercolor by Emil Bisttram signed lower right.
Painting measures: 20 x 15 inches. Frame size: 27 3/4"h x 23 1/4"w.
In excellent condition and beautifully frame...
Category
Mid-20th Century Phoenix - Art
Materials
Paint
John Marin Etching, 1921 - “Downtown, the El”
By John Marin
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Beautiful etching by John Marin (1870-1953) created 1921.
Title: Downtown, The El (From the New Republic Set)
Medium: Etching
Size: 6 7/8 x 8 5/8. Sheet: 10 3/4 x 14. Mat: 16 x 17 3...
Category
1920s Phoenix - Art
Materials
Paper
Allan Houser Marble Sculpture - Two Figures
By Allan Houser
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Wonderful sculpture of two figures by Native American artist Allan Houser (1914-1994).
The work is in excellent condition and measures 19 1/2"h x 12"w x 9"deep.
His signature is seen...
Category
Late 20th Century Phoenix - Art
Materials
Marble
Victor Korecki Polish Artist Winter Landscape Painting
Located in Phoenix, AZ
A beautiful winter scene by Polish artist Victor (Wiktor) Korecki.
This painting, an oil on canvas is in excellent condition and is signed lower left.
The work measures 20"h x 24"w. ...
Category
Mid-20th Century Phoenix - Art
Materials
Canvas, Oil
M-an
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Acrylic on linen
b. 1986 Yantai, Shandong, China
In the Diamond Sūtra, existence and emptiness are fundamental Buddhist notions. Buddha states that, “All conditioned phenomena are ...
Category
2010s Abstract Geometric Phoenix - Art
Materials
Linen, Acrylic
Recessed
By Jake Fischer
Located in Phoenix, AZ
oil on panel
b. 1985, Phoenix, AZ
Jake Fischer, born and raised in Phoenix, Arizona, graduated with a Master of Fine Art from Arizona State University in Drawing and Painting. Whil...
Category
2010s Abstract Geometric Phoenix - Art
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
Gene Kloss Original Pencil Signed Etching. Navajo Canyon Cliffs
By Gene Kloss
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Etching and drypoint on paper by famous Taos Artist Gene Kloss (1903-1996).
Title: Navajo Canyon Cliffs. Unframed and un-matted. Kloss #563
Pencil titled lower left. Pencil signed lo...
Category
Late 20th Century Phoenix - Art
Materials
Drypoint
Alexandre Hogue Original Lithograph, 1941 - Oil Field Christmas Tree
By Alexandre Hogue
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Original lithograph by Texas artist Alexandre Hogue (1898-1994).
Title: Oil Field Christmas Tree. Created: 1941.
Image size: 14 ½ x 9 1/8. Frame size: 22 ½ x 17.
Edition size is ...
Category
Mid-20th Century Phoenix - Art
Materials
Paper, Ink