Items Similar to Don Quixote, Surrealist Oil Painting by Ramon Santiago
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 3
Ramon SantiagoDon Quixote, Surrealist Oil Painting by Ramon Santiago1969
1969
$22,000
£16,784.94
€19,194.57
CA$31,002.70
A$33,805.12
CHF 17,940.04
MX$408,692.97
NOK 227,044.22
SEK 208,117.60
DKK 143,363.66
About the Item
Ramon Santiago, American (1943 - 2001) - Don Quixote, Year: 1969, Medium: Oil on Canvas, signed, Size: 60 x 42 in. (152.4 x 106.68 cm), Frame Size: 62 x 44 inches
- Creator:Ramon Santiago (1943 - 2001)
- Creation Year:1969
- Dimensions:Height: 62 in (157.48 cm)Width: 44 in (111.76 cm)
- Medium:
- Movement Style:
- Period:
- Condition:
- Gallery Location:Long Island City, NY
- Reference Number:Seller: RO854231stDibs: LU46617030852
About the Seller
4.9
Platinum Seller
Premium sellers with a 4.7+ rating and 24-hour response times
Established in 1979
1stDibs seller since 2014
3,194 sales on 1stDibs
Typical response time: 1 hour
- ShippingRetrieving quote...Shipping from: Long Island City, NY
- Return Policy
More From This Seller
View AllEl Cuadvado, Surrealist Oil and Acrylic Painting by Samuel Iztueta
Located in Long Island City, NY
Samuel Iztueta, American - El Cuadvado, Year: 2013, Medium: Oil and Acrylic on Canvas, signed and titled with writing verso, Size: 60 x 48 in. (152.4 x 121.92 cm)
Category
2010s Surrealist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil, Acrylic
Alexander, Surrealist Oil Painting by Arranz-Bravo
By Eduardo Arranz-Bravo
Located in Long Island City, NY
Alexander by Eduardo Arranz-Bravo, Spanish (1941)
Date: 2006
Oil on Canvas, signed l.r.
Size: 60 x 40 in. (152.4 x 101.6 cm)
Frame: 63 x 44 in. (160.02 x 111.76 cm)
This fabulous im...
Category
Early 2000s Modern Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil
Multi-Facet, Large Surrealist Oil Painting by Ramon Santiago
By Ramon Santiago
Located in Long Island City, NY
Artist: Ramon Santiago, American (1943 - 2001)
Title: Multi-Facet
Year: 1974
Medium: Oil on Canvas, signed and dated
Size: 40 x 34 inches
Category
1970s Surrealist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Cabeza, Oil Painting by Rodolfo Opazo Bernales
By Rodolfo Opazo
Located in Long Island City, NY
Artist: Rodolfo Opazo, Chilean (1935 - )
Title: Cabeza
Year: 1983
Medium: Oil on Canvas, signed l.l. and verso
Size: 39 x 32 inches
Category
1980s Surrealist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Mother Image, Surrealist Oil Painting by Ramon Santiago
By Ramon Santiago
Located in Long Island City, NY
Artist: Ramon Santiago, American (1943 - 2001)
Title: Mother Image
Year: circa 1972
Medium: Oil on Canvas, signed
Size: 66 in. x 46 in. (167.64 cm x 116.84 cm)
Category
1970s Surrealist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil
Mal Muchacho (Bad Boy)
By Armando Villagran
Located in Long Island City, NY
Artist: Armando Villagran, Mexican (1945 -1995)
Title: Mal Muchacho (Bad Boy)
Year: 1987
Medium: Oil on Canvas, signed l.l.
Size: 47 x 39 inches [119.38 x 99.06 cm]
Frame: 49 x 41 in...
Category
1980s Surrealist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil
You May Also Like
Don Quichotte
Located in Genève, GE
Oil on canvas
Category
1940s Italian School Abstract Paintings
Materials
Oil
Don Quixote
By Bernard Lorjou
Located in New York, NY
Bernard Lorjou (1908-1985 Fr.)
Don Quixote is from the Bull Fighter series from the period of 1960 and was in one collection till recently.
In 1948, he sh...
Category
Late 20th Century Expressionist Paintings
Materials
Oil
Cuban Art Abstract Oil Painting Latin American Ramon Carulla Surrealist Folk Art
By Ramon Carulla
Located in Surfside, FL
Ramon Antonio Carulla (Cuban, born 1936).
Oil paintings on paper. Titled "When Dreams Become Reality"
Artist signature lower right. Title on verso.
Retains original Joy Moos Gallery label. Sheet measures measures approximately 14 in. x 22 in. (paper). Framed 20.5 X 28.5
This painting is a mixed media with oil paint, on paper
It is hand signed recto and signed and titled verso.
An abstract naive, folk art, work depicting depicts colorful imaginative Surrealist figures. .
Ramon Carulla, born in Havana, Cuba in 1936 moved to the United States in 1967. He has exhibited widely throughout the United States, Latin America and Europe. He has participated in personal and group exhibitions in Canada, Venezuela, Mexico and Spain and throughout the USA.
Select Gallery Exhibitions:
Lowe Art Museum (Coral Gables, Florida),
The Museum of Fine Arts (Montreal, Canada),
The International Monetary Fund (Washington, D.C.)
The Art Expo (New York City).
Select Awards:
First Prize at the VI Graphic Biennial of Latin America (1983; San Juan, Puerto Rico),
the Silvia Daro Dawidowicz Award for Painting (1980; Metropolitan Museum)
the Samuel Golan Award (1982, Fine Art Auction Exhibition; CH 2, Miami, Florida).
the Cintas Fellowship (Institute of International Education; United Nations, New York)
SELECTED INDIVIDUAL EXHIBITIONS
2005 Sonnet Gallery (Sarasota, Florida)
2000 Ramon Carulla: People and Places - Corbino Galleries,
1998 The Dreamers - Cuban Collection Fine Art (Coral Gables, Florida)
1997 The Immigrant Series – Metro-Dade Cultural Resource Center (Miami, Florida)
1996-96 Ramon Carulla: Works on Paper – PJorn (Hamburg, Germany)
1994 Ramon Carulla: New Paintings, Plates & Boxes – The Barbara Scott Gallery
Rostros para recordar – Galería Traz (Mexico City, Mexico)
1993 Ramon Carulla, Exhibición Personal – Contemporary Art Museum (Panama)
1992 Ramon Carulla: Recent Work - The Barbara Scott Gallery (Bay Harbor, Florida)
1991 Cabinet Room – The Capitol (Tallahassee, Florida)
1988 Sofa & Hostage Series – Jay Moos Gallery
1987 20 Years After – Bacardi Art Gallery (Miami, Florida)
1985 Malcom Brown Gallery – (Cleveland, Ohio)
Mask Series...
Category
1970s Modern Figurative Paintings
Materials
Paper, Oil
Large Venezuelan Expressionist Oil Painting Diego Barboza Latin American Master
Located in Surfside, FL
Diego Barboza - 1945-2003
Hand signed and dated 1988 Oil on Canvas
Diego Barboza was born the Carabobo street of Maracaibo, Venezuela on February 4, 1945. He was a Venezuelan Neo Figurative Painter who is among the most famous and influential figures in Venezuelan art history. Diego Barboza opened a new chapter in Latin America, beyond the surreal or the magical realism of the Modern Latin American Masters. He created a new language of dislocation and transgression. Personages became distorted to the point that was very exaggerated forms His figures twisted and contorted without losing their presence or their pull. Extremities muscles, and bones burst into an explosive compound of divergent and convergent lines. Through eruptive brushstrokes and fractured outlines. Barboza created a world of illusions.
Barboza was born into a upper-middle-class family. He stopped going to school at 12 years old, and he registered himself at the School of Visual Art in the City of Maracaibo Venezuela. Barboza studied at the School of Visual Arts in Caracas, Venezuela. Barboza began his training as an artist at age 12 in his native Maracaibo when he left formal education to enroll in the then School of Plastic Arts of Zulia, then Julio Arraga School of Plastic Arts, where he was a student in the modeling, collage and Drawing of Angelina Curiel. His first collages, in the sixties, show the influence of American Pop Art. In 1967 he exhibited at the Ateneo de Caracas his series 'Los Ratones', a proposal then 'criticized by critics as unprecedented in Venezuela'. In his tribute to the film "Nosferatu" Friedrich Murnau included 32 drawings as well as two-dimensional objects. In 1968 he moved to London where he studied at the London College of Printing. From that time is his '30 Girls with Nets', an action in which 30 students of the London College of Printing, dressed in black and covered by white nets, toured London public places, behaving naturally. His 'street expressions', which he later called 'poetic actions', symbolized a breakdown of social restraints through unusual behaviors that sought to provoke public reactions. Upon his return to Venezuela in 1973, Barboza continues with this line of work, being recognized as one of the initiators of Venezuelan conceptual art. In the 1980's Diego Barboza turned to painting, the New Venezuelan Figuration. Here belongings and the feminine figure fill the work of that time, in which he embodied his intimacy and daily life through scenes of furnishings and flowers that included objects from his workshop and home. His nudes were made from live model, then to follow the path of distortion resulting in their unmistakable females: a figure that represented their personal way of appreciating beauty. Barboza presented his first individual exhibition at the Centro de Bellas Artes of Maracaibo Venezuela. In 1963, he traveled to London when the Conceptual Art movement started, he had the support of the London New Art Lab Gallery. On March 7, 1970 Barboza displayed his first work on Conceptual Art, which he called Art of Action. In London with the performance of 30 Girls with nets (30 Muchachas con redes). His second work was Nets and Hats in markets and restaurants (Con sombreros y redes en mercados y restaurantes). In London UK. His third The Centerpiece (El Ciempies) and the fourth Expression on a laundry-mat (Expresiones en una lavandería)
In 1974. Baboza returned to Venezuela. Where he presented two very important Conceptual Art works: The Armadillo Box (La Caja del Cachicamo) and from the School of Athens to the New School of Caracas (De la Escuela de Atenas a la Nueva Escuela de Caracas). Closing his cycle of Conceptual Art creation. IN Venezuela a sort of impromptu academy started up at Claudio Perna’s house. Eugenio Espinoza, Roberto Obregón, Antonieta Sosa, Alfred Wenemoser, Yeni and Nan, Sigfredo Chacón, Diego Barboza, Luis Villamizar, Margherita D’Amico, Pedro Terán, Alfredo del Mónaco, as well as international figures who happened to be visiting Venezuela such as Antoni Muntadas, Charlotte Moorman, and Roman Polanski would gather there. Venezuela, especially Caracas, was a rich field of action for modernism in South America. Venezuelan Geometric Abstraction, Op art and Kinetic Art dominated through crucial figures like Jesús Rafael Soto, Gego, Alejandro Otero, and Carlos Cruz Diez, the country’s kinetic art made a fundamental contribution internationally. The Greater London Arts Association and the Arts Council of Great Britain did several exhibitions of (North, Central, South, London, Wales, Scotland and Ulster) to show the actual Visual Arts in all of the United Kingdom and Diego Barboza was invited for this event with a solo exhibition, expressions around a cylinder (Expresiones alrededor de un cilindro).
Diego has made numerous solo and group exhibitions, obtaining rewards since 1963. He is represented in the most important museums of Venezuela, as well as in England, Brazil, Colombia and Cuba. In 1986 he was awarded the Municipal Visual Arts Award of the Municipal Council of the Federal District and in 1997 he received the National Prize for Plastic Arts granted by the National Council of Culture, CONAC.
Select Group Exhibitions
1964 Ateneo de Caracas, Caracas, Venezuela
1965 Salón Arturo Michelena, Valencia, Venezuela
1968 Salón Oficial Museo de Bellas Artes, Caracas, Venezuela
1971 Art Spectrum London, London, Great Britain
1972 Serpentine Gallery, London, Great Britain
1973 Midland Group Gallery, London, Great Britain
1974 Galería BANAP, Caracas, Venezuela
1975 Casa de Las Américas, La Habana, Cuba
Museo de Bellas Artes, Caracas
Galería de Arte Nuevo, Buenos Aires, Argentina
1976 Museo de Arte Moderno, Bogotá, Colombia
Museo de Arte Contemporáneo, Sao Paulo, Brazil
Museo de la Tertulia, Cali, Colombia
Bienal de Venecia, Venecia, Italy
1979 Centro de Artes y Comunicación, Buenos Aires, Argentina
1980 Galería NBC, Memphis, Tennessee, USA
1981 Galería de Arte Nacional, Caracas, Venezuela
Museo de Arte Contemporáneo, Medellín, Colombia
Museo de Bellas Artes, Caracas, Venezuela
1986 Museo de Arte La Rinconada, Caracas, Venezuela
1989 Galería Venzor, Chicago, Illinois, USA
1990 Museo Bellas Artes, Santiago de Chile, Chile
1992 Ambrosino Gallery, Coral Gables, Florida, USA
1993 Museo de Arte de Petare, Caracas, Venezuela
Centro de Arte Lia Bermúdez...
Category
1980s Neo-Expressionist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Don Quixote - figurative, contemporary, dystopian, acrylic on paper
Located in Bloomfield, ON
This street art style graphic acrylic painting is by John Scott.
The crudely painted imagery of this Canadian artist often included his signature use of rabbit-like figures. Scott c...
Category
1980s Contemporary Figurative Paintings
Materials
Paper, Acrylic
Armando Villagran Original Painting
By Armando Villagran
Located in San Francisco, CA
Armando Villagran (Mexican, 1945-1995)
Untitled (Figure with Animal), 1991
Oil on canvas, signed and dated lower right
Canvas: 55"h x 43.5"w, overall (with frame): 56"h x 44"w
Born ...
Category
1990s Surrealist Figurative Paintings
Materials
Oil











