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UnknownOriginal Cubist still life oil painting of a violin, French mid 20th Century
$1,344.49
£985
€1,158.82
CA$1,872.14
A$2,011.81
CHF 1,079.45
MX$23,697.85
NOK 13,572.90
SEK 12,398.76
DKK 8,660.53
About the Item
Serra (French, 20th Century)
Homage au violin
Oil on canvas laid down on board
Signed ‘SERRA’ (lower right)
16.7/8 x 20.7/8 in. (43 x 53 cm.)
- Dimensions:Height: 16.88 in (42.88 cm)Width: 20.88 in (53.04 cm)Depth: 1 in (2.54 cm)
- Medium:
- Movement Style:
- Period:
- Condition:Oil on canvas laid down on board, good impasto. A few minor retouches, slight surface dirt. Recently reframed in a white box frame.
- Gallery Location:Petworth, GB
- Reference Number:1stDibs: LU54038846042
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This is a selective list of exhibitions in which she participated during her life. Its main source is Louise Noun's article on Weinrich in Woman's Art Journal, supplemented by contemporary news accounts in The New York Times, the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, the New York Evening Post, The Philadelphia Inquirer, and The Christian Science Monitor.
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Agnes Weinrich was born in 1873 on a prosperous farm in south east Iowa. Both her father and mother were German immigrants and German was the language spoken at home. Following her mother's death in 1879 she was raised by her father, Christian Weinrich. In 1894, at the age of 59, he retired from farming and moved his household, including his three youngest children—Christian Jr. (24), Agnes (21), and Lena (17), to nearby Burlington, Iowa, where Agnes attended the Burlington Collegiate Institute from which she graduated in 1897.[1][2][3] Christian took Agnes and Lena with him on a trip to Germany in 1899 to reestablish links with their German relatives. When he returned home later that year, he left the two women in Berlin with some of these relatives, and when, soon after his return, he died, they inherited sufficient wealth to live independently for the rest of their lives.
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