Loading the content...
Navigation
More Info

Additional information

Artist

Color

Is Autographed

Item Dimensions

Media Type

Product Group

Size

Reviews (0)

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.

Related Products

Dunes XXVI

This piece has been SOLD. The eye guides the way to the distant water through abstracted dunes and beach grass at sunset. My Dunes Series is created with a palette knife and water soluble oil paint on natural Belgian linen. When beginning this particular piece, I wanted to evoke the memory of a very colorful sunset depicted horizontally to show the expanse of the changing sky. I have been exploring different sizes and orientation and expressing differing times of day.This painting is on a gallery wrapped canvas with natural linen edges. It comes varnished and ready to hang.

#4458

Hiro Yokose was born in Nagasaki, Japan, 1959 and lives and works in the heart of Manhattan, NY. Yokose combines oil and beeswax to create landscapes that appear simultaneously abstract and realistic. Because of the artist’s unique technique of painting, the surfaces of his work have a sensuous and tactile appearance where depth is both an illusion and a reality. PUBLIC COLLECTIONS Citibank, New York, NY Boeing Company, Chicago, Il Exon Corporation, Irving, TX Fidelity Investments Corporation, Boston, MA Goldman Sachs and Company, San Francisco, CA Kennedy Museum of American Art, Ohio University, OH Lincoln National Corporation, Fort Wayne, IN Marnell Corrao, Las Vegas, NV Miami-Dade College, FL Microsoft Corporation, Seattle, WA Prudential, New York, NY San José Museum of Art, CA TransAmerica Corporation, San Francisco, CA Harvard University, Cambridge, MA The Ritz Carlton Hotel, Washington, D. C.
$ (as of June 5, 2017, 10:48 am)3,865.00 (as of June 5, 2017, 10:48 am)

Survival Tip #13 (Wolves) Original

Original painting by Kate Nielsen. "Survival Tip #13 (Wolves)" is a 20"x24" acrylic and enamel painting on mylar.

Portrait 2

Oil on board by the American artist John F. Leonard, circa 1965, shows an abstract portrait of a young man in in cool tones of blue and grey.
$ (as of June 5, 2017, 4:28 pm)2,350.00 (as of June 5, 2017, 4:28 pm)

Free My Soul

"Color speaks to me, when it's right, the colors dance, they sing and give you an incredible feeling". - Kerri Rosenthal

Crayons

"Crayons" (2014) is an stunning photo-realist oil painting on vintage printing plate by American Latest artist Michael Fitts. This painting is one in every of his finest and largest up to now, measuring 19.5 x 27 inches, is unframed and in excellent condition. Fiitts is across the world acclaimed for his paintings of on a regular basis objects from American culture which might be nostalgic and ephemeral and places them into the realm on the revered, painting them in an unbelievable trompe l'oeil manner on the center of his canvas as if an icon or worship. His subjects include coffee cups, toys, balloons, shoes, snack foods, utensils, and other objects of the American cultural experience during the last several decades.
$ (as of June 5, 2017, 12:25 pm)3,800.00 (as of June 5, 2017, 12:25 pm)

Moment of Twilight

I use only the highest quality professional-grade oil paints and natural non-toxic solvents to produce archival paintings. The 1.5 inch gallery wrapped edges are painted, so the piece comes ready to hang.
$ (as of June 5, 2017, 7:32 am)875.00 (as of June 5, 2017, 7:32 am)

Luminosity V

This abstract landscape has an expansive view and uplifting sky, high contrast and lots of texture.
$ (as of July 24, 2017, 7:44 pm)1,975.00 (as of July 24, 2017, 7:44 pm)

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.
$ (as of June 5, 2017, 4:02 pm)5,750.00 (as of June 5, 2017, 4:02 pm)

Tin Robot

"Tin Robot" (2013) by American Contemporary artist Michael Fitts is a whimsical and highly detailed original oil painting on reclaimed metal. Fitts paints the vintage toy in a manner that is intentionally filled with nostalgia and Neo-Pop kitsch. He elevates the importance of this whimsical everyday object to the status of a revered icon, by painting the toy in super-bright colors, placing it at the center of the metal "canvas" and with a deep shadow, as if it hovers just above the rusted brown surface.


Follow Us

Back to top