90×60 cm. Visarute Angkatavanich Promenade
"These stunning portraits show Siamese fighting fish seemingly floating in mid air, displaying their long, flowing fins and brilliant colours. Thai photographer Visarute Angkatavanich uses specialist lighting and crystal-clear water to capture exuberantly finned and coloured varieties of Betta splendens." Review from the Guardian, UK
$1,250.00
Oranges, Box and Painting on Door
John Chervinsky is fascinated by the scientific principles that govern our existence - in this case the concept of time. Oranges, Box and Painting on Door is from the series Studio Physics in which Chervinsky sets up his still life, photographs it, and crops a subset image which is then sent to a painting factory in China and painted by an anonymous artist. The painting is mailed back to the Chervinsky, who reinserts it into the original still life and re-photographs it. The final image shows the painting and the still life which has remained untouched during this experiment and documents the marking of time. Next available edition number is 12/15 International shipping available upon request. Please contact the gallery for rate quote.
$2,400.00
Felicka
This is a realistic portrait of a woman rendered in oil, completed in 1996 by American traditional painter, William Whitaker. It measures 10 x 8 inches.
$5,750.00
AND THEN, AND THEN AND THEN AND THEN AND THEN. YELLOW UNIVERSE
Currently unavailable.
We don't know when or if this item will be back in stock.
"AND THEN, AND THEN AND THEN AND THEN AND THEN. YELLOW UNIVERSE" is a dynamic work featuring Murakami's character.
Jelly Fish Eyes – white 4
Currently unavailable.
We don't know when or if this item will be back in stock.
"Jelly Fish Eyes - white 4" is a dynamic work featuring Murakami's character.
No more Dialectics # 1 (Typewriter series)
"Typewriter Series". Showcasing these works, Daniel takes objects such as old typewriters and 35mm cameras: "Discarded remnants of the industrial world," transforming these objects into high-end art. The objects are placed in concrete, creating an altered composition. He then encases the subject in a white wooden box, affecting the composition along with elements of perspective and proportion. The change of color from utilitarian to artistic is spotlighted to great effect. The new white color enhances the form. This is also aided by the isolation of the object. The moving parts of the old piece are now stilled making the motion implied, thus creating an affect completely different and unique in every possible way. Fiorda began recycling objects that were once useful but had been discarded or abandoned as now useless. Because of his creativity and his ability to see beauty in refuse, the ''objets trouves'' are turned into ''objets d'art.'' By finding the aesthetic element in what has been discarded, Fiorda, through his sculpture, is preserving our environment from a new point of view. His font of debris may include antiquated machinery, foldout beds, pianos, and the ubiquitous automobile. Knowing that these had once been part of somebody's life, Fiorda creates a dialogue between the pieces first use and their re-thought second use, thus bringing anthropology into his art work. There is often a kinetic element that the sculptor creates that was not inherent in the original pieces. The use of man-made light is also often incorporated into the work. Finalized forms also tend to point in a particular direction, be it up, down, over or diagonally. Daniel Fiorda's sculpture breaks up the logic of representation characterized by traditional Western-art sculptures. His works are made with discarded metals assembled in a complex and busy structure that recalls a Neo-baroque approach to art.
$5,500.00
No more Dialectics # 2 (Typewriter series)
"Typewriter Series". Showcasing these works, Daniel takes objects such as old typewriters and 35mm cameras: "Discarded remnants of the industrial world," transforming these objects into high-end art. The objects are placed in concrete, creating an altered composition. He then encases the subject in a white wooden box, affecting the composition along with elements of perspective and proportion. The change of color from utilitarian to artistic is spotlighted to great effect. The new white color enhances the form. This is also aided by the isolation of the object. The moving parts of the old piece are now stilled making the motion implied, thus creating an affect completely different and unique in every possible way. Fiorda began recycling objects that were once useful but had been discarded or abandoned as now useless. Because of his creativity and his ability to see beauty in refuse, the ''objets trouves'' are turned into ''objets d'art.'' By finding the aesthetic element in what has been discarded, Fiorda, through his sculpture, is preserving our environment from a new point of view. His font of debris may include antiquated machinery, foldout beds, pianos, and the ubiquitous automobile. Knowing that these had once been part of somebody's life, Fiorda creates a dialogue between the pieces first use and their re-thought second use, thus bringing anthropology into his art work. There is often a kinetic element that the sculptor creates that was not inherent in the original pieces. The use of man-made light is also often incorporated into the work. Finalized forms also tend to point in a particular direction, be it up, down, over or diagonally. Daniel Fiorda's sculpture breaks up the logic of representation characterized by traditional Western-art sculptures. His works are made with discarded metals assembled in a complex and busy structure that recalls a Neo-baroque approach to art
Free My Soul
"Color speaks to me, when it's right, the colors dance, they sing and give you an incredible feeling". - Kerri Rosenthal
Beginning
Charcoal drawing on paper. The creases in the paper were there when the drawing was made and are intentional.
$1,600.00
Passing the Veil of Remembrance
This intricate ink drawing is on heavy-weight paper. It will require a frame for display.
$450.00
Refraction
Black and white charcoal drawing created on illustration board. Studies of Architecture to create abstract forms.
$400.00
[photograph] 21 Oct 2012
"My work process involves photographing fields of matter and discovering what these fields, within the structure of this media, can potentially yield. Recently, I have been working with India ink applied to translucent drafting film, which is hung and backlit for photographing. I shoot with an 8x10 camera and print in a traditional color darkroom. The subject matter is not a construct of previously sketched and carefully rendered images. It is rather a documentation of collaborative happenstance with material and mark, and with the catalytic ability for photography to shift this literal matter into potential notions of reference." Read more in the description below.