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Drippy Lemons

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

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.

Survival Tip #13 (Wolves) Original

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

#5255

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)4,775.00 (as of June 5, 2017, 10:48 am)

Dunes XXIV

The eye makes its way to the water through the dunes and beach grass. This piece is part of an ongoing series created with a palette knife and displays unique layering of color and abstract perception. When beginning this particular piece, I set out to offer more abstraction, giving a contemporary view with enough information for imagination to fill in the scene. The painting is on gallery wrapped Belgian linen with clean, natural edges. It comes varnished and wired to hang. Read more in the description below.

Fortitude II

Fortitude I and Fortitude II were inspired by two beautiful trees whose leaves turned gorgeous, seasonal colors, but refused to fall when surrounding trees had succumbed to the weather. The piece is finished on the edges, varnished, wired, and ready to hang.
$ (as of July 24, 2017, 7:44 pm)900.00 (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)

Black and White No. 81

"I enjoy painting in black an white because it its the most extreme of contrast.  I am not a tonal painter and I feel that one color can make a contrasting color that much more beautiful.  Black and white may just be the best two colors as they allow all the other colors of the room to shine.  It is the most neutral of color combo's and can help with layering in homes, the paintings will balance any other art in the room, regardless of the color scheme or the design plan.  They are the Switzerland of paint colors. Sometimes my eyes need a retrieve from color and so I move on to painting in black and white. I usually paint abstracts although I am exploring black and white flowers and a black Drippy Heart, which is just as happy and beautiful as my yellow ones ;) ". - Kerri Rosenthal, August 2104

#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)

Family Portrait

This piece takes a surreal spin on the 1970's family photograph. This piece is featured as a UGallery Staff Favorite. See it and our other favorites in the Staff Favorites collection
$ (as of June 5, 2017, 4:02 pm)1,900.00 (as of June 5, 2017, 4:02 pm)


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