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Item Ships From: Manhattan
ART, poster for Colby College Museum hand signed and inscribed by Robert Indiana
By Robert Indiana
Located in New York, NY
Robert Indiana ART, poster for Colby College Museum exhibition (hand signed and inscribed by Robert Indiana), 1973 Offset lithograph poster Hand signed and inscribed by the artist on the front 35 × 23 inches This uniquely signed and inscribed poster was published on the occasion of an exhibition at Colby College Art Museum from September 16 - November 3, 1973, featuring new acquisitions...
Category

1970s Pop Art Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Offset, Permanent Marker, Lithograph

Split Stone: abstract drawing based on Auden poetry and Yorkshire landscape
By Henry Moore
Located in New York, NY
This abstract, black and white drawing is one of a series of 18 lithographs drawn by the artist for the Auden Poems/Moore Lithographs 1974 book and portfolio. This work is from an ed...
Category

Late 20th Century Modern Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

It s a Free Concert European offset print (Hand Signed by Richard Prince)
By Richard Prince
Located in New York, NY
Richard Prince It's a Free Concert (Hand Signed by Richard Prince), 2014 Offset Lithograph (hand signed by Richard Prince) Hand signed by the artist on the front Unnumbered 33 × 23 3...
Category

2010s Contemporary Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

James Siena at PACE poster Hand signed by James Siena complex linear abstraction
By James Siena
Located in New York, NY
James Siena at PACE Gallery, 2019 Offset lithograph exhibition invitation (Hand signed by James Siena) 19 1/2 × 14 1/2 inches Unframed This exquisite fold...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Offset, Graphite, Pencil, Lithograph

Richard Lindner, Adults-Only, Rare 1970s Pop Art poster in vintage frame Lt. Ed.
By Richard Lindner
Located in New York, NY
Richard Lindner Adults-Only, 1979 Offset lithograph poster Plate signature with date, right front Limite Edition of 500 (unnumbered) Frame Included: held in vintage 1970s metal perio...
Category

1970s Pop Art Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

America Needs McGovern, Lt Ed Hand signed by BOTH Rivers and McGovern
By Larry Rivers
Located in New York, NY
This is a true collectible! The regular edition of only 100 is hand signed and numbered by Larry Rivers; but the present work is ALSO hand signed and inscribed by George McGovern- a ...
Category

1970s Pop Art Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

Daylilies, Lincoln Center silkscreen (Hand Signed Inscribed by Alex Katz)
By Alex Katz
Located in New York, NY
Alex Katz (after) Day Lilies (Hand Signed and Inscribed by Alex Katz), 1992 Large silkscreen poster on wove paper Boldly signed, inscribed and dated on the lower, right front in blac...
Category

1990s Pop Art Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Screen

Rolling Stock Series (For Trish)
By Robert Cottingham
Located in New York, NY
Robert Cottingham's Rolling Stock series is a significant part of his artistic portfolio, focusing on railroad imagery. The series features hand-colored etchings, collographs, and mo...
Category

1990s Contemporary Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Aquatint

Untitled (Jahn 84)
By Fred Sandback
Located in New York, NY
Fred Sandback was a minimalist conceptual-based sculptor known for his yarn sculptures, drawings, and prints. He majored in philosophy at Yale Universit...
Category

1980s Minimalist Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Dennis Corrigan, Nathaniel Hawthorne Posing with a Formally Dressed Gopher, 1978
Located in New York, NY
Dennis Corrigan gives us a fresh, admittedly whimsical, interpretation of the important nineteenth-century American author, Nathaniel Hawthorne. Known to most of us for the 'dark rom...
Category

1970s American Modern Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Etching

Tate Gallery Exhibition poster (hand signed by Ossip Zadkine)
By Ossip Zadkine
Located in New York, NY
Ossip Zadkine Tate Gallery Exhibition poster (hand signed by Ossip Zadkine), 1961 Off-set Lithograph Poster (Hand Signed by Ossip Zadkine) Signed lower right front 30 × 20 inches Unf...
Category

1960s Abstract Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

Color Double, signed annotated geometric abstraction sculptural lithograph PP2
By John Newman
Located in New York, NY
John Newman (b.1952) Color Double, 1990 Color Lithograph Signed, annotated, and dated in graphite pencil on the front. Edition of 2 (PP II, aside from the regular edition of 32) 27 × 19 3/4 inches Unframed Accompanied by gallery issued Certificate of Guarantee A rare signed Printers Proof, aside from the regular edition of only 32 John Newman received his Masters of Fine Arts degree from the Yale School of Art...
Category

1990s Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

A Life (B) R.B. Kitaj Film noir night city scene of woman in red dress
By Ronald Brooks Kitaj
Located in New York, NY
Signed by the artist and numbered 49/50 lower left in pencil. Color lithograph on mauve Wookey Hole handmade waterleaf paper. This print features the encounter between an alluring ...
Category

Late 20th Century Expressionist Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Damien Hirst skull record cover art
By Damien Hirst
Located in NEW YORK, NY
Damien Hirst Skull album art: Damien Hirst for The Hours, 2009. Features 2 picture sleeves, plus front and back album covers, and record labels all illustrated and designed by Damien...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Pop Art Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

Homely Girl, A Life, Volumes I II Signed by Louise Bourgeois AND Arthur Miller
By Louise Bourgeois
Located in New York, NY
Louise Bourgeois Homely Girl, A Life, Volumes I and II (Literary books with 10 original etchings) Hand signed by both artist Louise Bourgeois and Pulitzer winning playwright Arthur M...
Category

1990s Abstract Expressionist Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Paper, Mixed Media, Etching, Lithograph, Offset

John Chamberlain, Signed Western Union cable re: sculpture show at Leo Castelli
By John Chamberlain
Located in New York, NY
John Chamberlain Hand Signed Letter re: Leo Castelli Exhibition, 1982 Typewriter on paper (hand signed) 6 1/2 × 8 1/2 inches Hand-signed by artist, Signed in purple felt tip marker Hand signed telegraph/letter refers to Chamberlain's exhibition at the legendary Leo Castell Gallery. A piece of history! John Chamberlain Biography John Chamberlain (1927 – 2011) was a quintessentially American artist, channeling the innovative power of the postwar years into a relentlessly inventive practice spanning six decades. He first achieved renown for sculptures made in the late 1950s through 1960s from automobile parts—these were path-breaking works that effectively transformed the gestural energy of Abstract Expressionist painting into three dimensions. Ranging in scale from miniature to monumental, Chamberlain’s compositions of twisted, crushed, and forged metal also bridged the divide between Process Art and Minimalism, drawing tenets of both into a new kinship. These singular works established him as one of the first American artists to determine color as a natural component of abstract sculpture. From the late 1960s until the end of his life, Chamberlain harnessed the expressive potential of an astonishing array of materials, which varied from Plexiglas, resin, and paint, to foam, aluminum foil, and paper bags. After spending three years in the United States Navy during World War II, Chamberlain enrolled in the Art Institute of Chicago and Black Mountain College, where he developed the critical underpinnings of his work. Chamberlain lived and worked in many parts of the United States, moving between New York City, Long Island, Los Angeles, Santa Fe, Connecticut, and Sarasota, before finally settling on Shelter Island. In many ways, each location provoked a distinct material sensibility, often defined by the availability of that material or the limitations of physical space. In New York City, Chamberlain pulled scrap metal and twelve-inch acoustic tiles from the ceiling of his studio apartment. He chose urethane in Los Angeles in 1965 (a material he had been considering for many years), and film in Mexico in 1968. He eventually returned to metal in 1972, and, in Sarasota, he expanded the scale of his works to make his iconic Gondolas (1981 – 1982). The movement of the artist and the subsequent evolution of the work is indicative not only of a kind of American restlessness but also of Chamberlain’s own personal evolution: he sometimes described his use of automobile materials as sculptural self-portraits, infused with balance and rhythm characteristic of the artist himself. Chamberlain refused to separate color from his practice, saying, ‘I never thought of sculpture without color. Do you see anything around that has no color? Do you live in a world with no color?’. He both honored and assigned value to color in his practice—in his early sculptures color was not added, but composed from the preexisting palette of his chosen automobile parts. Chamberlain later began adding color to metal in 1974, dripping and spraying—and sometimes sandblasting—paint and lacquer onto his metal components prior to their integration. With his polyurethane foam works, color was a variable of light: ultraviolet rays or sunlight turned the material from white to amber. It was this profound visual effect that brought the artist’s personal Abstract Expressionist hand into industrial three-dimensional sculpture. Chamberlain moved seamlessly through scale and volume, creating material explorations in monumental, heavy-gauge painted aluminum foil in the 1970s, and later in the 1980s and 1990s, miniatures in colorful aluminum foil and chromium painted steel. Central to Chamberlain’s works is the notion that sculpture denotes a great deal of weight and physicality, disrupting whatever space it occupies. In the Barges series (1971 – 1983) he made immense foam couches, inviting spectators to lounge upon the cushioned landscape. At the end of his career, Chamberlain shifted his practice outdoors, and through a series of determined experiments, finally created brilliant, candy-colored sculptures in twisted aluminum foil. In 2012, four of these sculptures were shown outside the Seagram Building in New York, accompanied by playful titles such as ‘PINEAPPLESURPRISE’ (2010) and ‘MERMAIDSMISCHIEF’ (2009). These final works exemplify Chamberlain’s lifelong dedication to change—of his materials, of his practice, and, consequently, of American Art. Chamberlain has been the subject of numerous solo exhibitions, including two major Retrospectives at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York NY in 2012 and 1971; ‘John Chamberlain, Squeezed and Tied. Foam and Paper Sculptures 1969-70,’ Dan Flavin Art Institute, Dia Center for the Arts, Bridgehampton NY (2007); ‘John Chamberlain. Foam Sculptures 1966–1981, Photographs 1989–2004,’ Chinati Foundation, Marfa TX (2005); ‘John Chamberlain. Current Work and Fond Memories, Sculptures and Photographs 1967–1995,’ Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Netherlands (Traveling Exhibition) (1996); and ‘John Chamberlain. Sculpture, 1954–1985,’ Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles CA (1986). Chamberlain’s sculptures are part of permanent exhibitions at the Chinati Foundation in Marfa TX and at Dia:Beacon in upstate New York. In 1964, Chamberlain represented the United States in the American Pavilion at the 32nd International Exhibition of the Venice Biennale. He received many awards during his life, including a Doctor of Fine Arts, honoris causa, from the College for Creative Studies, Detroit (2010); the Distinction in Sculpture Honor from the Sculpture Center, New York (1999); the Gold Medal from The National Arts Club Award, New York (1997); the Lifetime Achievement Award in Contemporary Sculpture by the International Sculpture Center, Washington D.C. (1993); and the Skowhegan Medal for Sculpture, New York NY (1993). -Courtesy Hauser & Wirth Leo Castelli Leo Castelli was born in 1907 in Trieste, a city on the Adriatic sea, which, at the time, was the main port of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. Leo’s father, Ernest Kraus, was the regional director for Austria-Hungary’s largest bank, the Kreditandstalt; his mother, Bianca Castelli, was the daughter of a Triesten coffee merchant. With the outbreak of World War I in 1914 the Kraus family relocated to Vienna where Leo continued his education. A particularly memorable moment for Leo during this period of his life was the funeral of Emperor Francis Joseph which he witnessed in November of 1916. Leo and his family returned to Trieste when the war ended in 1918. With the fall of the Austro-Hungarian Empire Trieste embraced its new Italian identity. Motivated by this shift Ernest decided to adopt his wife's more Italian-sounding maiden name, Castelli, which his children also assumed. In many ways the Castelli’s return Trieste after the war marked an optimistic new beginning for the family. Ernest was made director of the Banca Commerciale Italiana, which had replaced the Kreditandstalt as the top bank in Trieste. This elevated position allowed Ernest and Bianca to cultivate a cosmopolitan life-style. Together they hosted frequent parties which brought them in contact with a spectrum of political, financial, and cultural luminaries. Growing up in such an environment fostered in Leo and his two siblings, Silvia and Giorgio, a strong appreciation of high culture. During this time Leo developed a passion for Modern literature and perfected his fluency in German, French, Italian, and English. After earning his law degree at the University of Milan in 1932, Leo began his adult life as an insurance agent in Bucharest. Although Leo found the job unfulfilling and tedious, the people he met in Bucharest made up for this deficiency. Among the most significant of Leo’s acquaintances during this time was the eminent businessman, Mihail Shapira. Leo eventually became friendly with the rest of the Shapira family and in 1933 he married Mihail's youngest daughter, Ileana. In 1934 Leo and Ileana moved to Paris where, thanks to his step-father’s influence, Leo was able to get a job in the Paris branch of the Banca d'Italia. In the same year, Leo met the interior designer René Drouin, who became his close friend. In the spring of 1938, while walking through the Place Vendôme, Leo and René came across a storefront for rent between the Ritz hotel and a Schiaparelli boutique. The space immediately impressed them as an ideal location for an art gallery, a plan which became reality the following spring in 1939. The Drouin Gallery opened with an exhibition featuring painting and furniture by Surrealist artists including Léonor Fini, Augene Berman, Meret Oppenheim, Max Ernst, and Salvador Dali. Despite the success of this initial exhibition, the gallery proved short-lived. Germany invaded Poland on September 1, 1939 marking the start of World War II and consequently the temporary end of the Drouin gallery. René was called to serve in the French army, while Leo, Ileana, and their three-year-old daughter Nina moved to the relative safety of Cannes, where Ileana’s family owned a summer house. As the war escalated, it became evident that Europe was no longer safe for the Castelli family—Leo and Ileana were both Jewish. In March of 1941, Leo, Ileana and Nina fled to New York bringing with them Nina’s nurse Frances and their dog, Noodle. After a year of moving around the city, the family took up permanent residence at 4 East 77 Street in a townhouse Mihail had bought. Nine months after his arrival in New York, in December of 1943, Leo volunteered for the US army, expediting his naturalization as a US citizen. Owing to his facility with languages, Leo was assigned to serve in the U.S. Army Intelligence Corp, a position which he held for two years, until February 1946. While on military leave in 1945 Leo visited Paris and stopped by Place Vendôme gallery where René had once more set up business selling work by European avant-garde artists such as Jean Dubuffet and Jean Fautrier. The meeting not only rekindled René and Leo’s friendship but also the latter’s interest in art dealing, a pursuit which Leo began to view as more than a mere hobby but as a potential career. After reconnecting, the two friends decided to go back into partnership with Leo acting as the New York representative for the Drouin Gallery. Working in this capacity, Leo began to form relationships with some of the New York art world’s most influential figures, including Peggy Guggenhiem, Sydney Janis, Willem De Kooning, and Jackson Pollock. By the late 40s Leo’s ties with René Drouin had begun to slacken, while his alliance with the dealer Sydney Janis became closer. Janis opened his New York gallery in 1948 and in 1950 invited Leo to curate an exhibition of contemporary French and American artists. The show drew a significant connection between the venerable tradition of European Modernism and the emerging artists of the New York School. Not long after this, in 1951, Leo was asked by these same New York School artists to organize the groundbreaking Ninth Street Show. This exhibition was instrumental in establishing Abstract Expressionism as the preeminent art movement of the post-war era. Leo founded his own gallery in 1957, transforming the living room on the fourth floor of the 77th Street townhouse into an exhibition space. Perhaps the most critical moment of Leo’s career occurred later that year, when he first visited the studios of Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns. In 1958 Leo gave Johns and Rauschenberg solo shows, in January and March respectively. For Johns, this was the first solo show of his career. These exhibitions received wide critical acclaim, solidifying Leo’s reputation not only as a dealer but as the arbiter of a new and important art movement. Over the course of the 1960s Leo played a formative role in launching the careers of many of the most significant artists of the twentieth century including Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol, Claes Oldenberg, Cy Twombly, Donald Judd, Dan Flavin, Robert Morris, Bruce Nauman, Richard Serra, Joseph Kosuth and Lawrence Weiner. Through his support of these artists Leo likewise helped cultivate and define the movements of Pop, Minimalism, Conceptual Art, and Post-Minimalism. As business expanded over the course of the 60s and artistic trends shifted in favor of larger artworks, Leo realized that his townhouse gallery was not sufficient to meet these new demands. Indicative of the trend toward maximal art...
Category

1980s Abstract Expressionist Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Ink, Lithograph, Offset

Caitlin
By Swoon
Located in New York, NY
Caitlin 2019 5-color photopolymer letterpress relief print of hand-torn kozo paper (Edition of 300) 20.5 x 13.5 inches This work is offered by CLAMP in New York City.
Category

2010s Contemporary Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Screen

Central Synagogue Lexington Avenue Looking North Etching and aquatint S/N Framed
By Richard Haas
Located in New York, NY
Richard Haas Central Synagogue - Lexington Avenue Looking North, 1991 Etching and aquatint on wove paper Signed, dated and numbered 8/35 in graphite pencil on the front; bears the or...
Category

1990s Realist Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Etching, Aquatint

Sting Like a Bee
By Muhammad Ali
Located in New York, NY
Serigraph, Edition of 500 Hand-signed by artist, Signed and numbered in pencil Muhammad Ali, the groundbreaking athlete and sociopolitical figure of the twentieth century, is rememb...
Category

Late 20th Century American Modern Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Paper, Screen

Ramshackle Barn (de-accessioned from the Denver Art Museum)
By Asa Cheffetz
Located in New York, NY
Asa Cheffetz Ramshackle Barn (de-accessioned from the Denver Art Museum), ca. 1929 Wood-engraving Pencil signed, numbered 27/100 and titled by the artist on the front 13 × 10 1/4 inches Unframed - affixed to matting De-accessioned from the collection of the Denver Art Museum Asa Chaffetz, "the engraver's engraver" This is the original numbered wood engraving from 1929; not a later re-print This print was honorable mention in the International Exhibition of prints, Art Institute of Chicago, 1929 Exhibited: New England engraved: The prints of Asa Cheffetz: An Exhibition of his wood engraving & an exploration of his life as an artist. Springfield, MA: Museum of Fine Arts, 1984 (A different example) Asa Cheffetz Biography: Born in Buffalo, New York, Cheffetz studied at the School Of The Museum Of Fine Arts in Boston under Philip Leslie Hale...
Category

1920s Realist Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Engraving

Raft of the Medusa, Part IV (Casino Knokke poster, Hand Signed by Frank Stella)
By Frank Stella
Located in New York, NY
Frank Stella Raft of the Medusa, Part IV (Casino Knokke poster, Hand signed by Frank Stella), 1991 Offset lithograph (hand signed in black marker by Frank Stella) Signed in black mar...
Category

1990s Pop Art Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

Alice Earl Lyall, (Abstraction -- with Figure)
Located in New York, NY
This print was made for the American Abstract Artists Portfolio, 1937. All the images were lithographs made on zinc plates. Usually they were signed or initialed in the image -- on t...
Category

1930s Abstract Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Anna Barry, Navajo Yei Bei Chai
By Anna Barry
Located in New York, NY
Anna Barry (1907-2001), and her husband, the artist Ira Moskovitz, spent years in New Mexico in the late 1930s and 40s. They returned permanently to New York City in 1949. The screen print (also known as silk screen or serigraph) Navajo Yei...
Category

Mid-20th Century American Modern Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Screen

"Small Abstract" by Melissa Meyer (Green, Yellow, Blue, Abstract, Pattern)
By Melissa Meyer
Located in New York, NY
This is a screen print, signed and numbered in pencil by the artist. The paper is bright white and the colors are vibrant. Total edition size is 108 plus 18 APs. Published by Lincoln...
Category

Early 2000s Abstract Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Screen

Lullaby Sketches: black white drawing based on Auden poetry and Yorkshire lands
By Henry Moore
Located in New York, NY
One of a series of 18 lithographs drawn by the artist for the Auden Poems/Moore Lithographs 1974 book and portfolio. This work is from an edition of 25 printed on vellum aside from the portfolio (edition of 75) and the book. Signed by the artist and numbered 1/25 lower left in pencil. This print features small sketches of heads resting on forearms. Moore experimented with different angles, appearing to practice for the composition for Lullaby: Sleeping Head, which depicts a shadowy figure supporting the head of a sleeping woman. Lullaby: Sketches is a rare window into Moore’s process of composing an image. Delicate, single-line arms and hair reveal the sculptor’s equal talent as a draftsman. The imagery for Lullaby Sketches was inspired by Auden’s poem Lullaby. Lullaby was the first poem Moore read for this project, which begins: “Lay your sleeping head, my love / Human on my faithless arm; / Time and fevers burn away Individual beauty from / Thoughtful children, and the grave / Proves the child ephemeral: / But in my arms till break of day / Let the living creature lie, / Mortal, guilty, but to me / The entirely beautiful.” The Auden/Moore limited edition book and portfolio were exhibited on publication at the British Museum, London, with an accompanying catalogue. Lullaby Sketches is one of a group of lithographs...
Category

Late 20th Century Modern Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Owen Weiri (also Wiiri), The Coal Miner
Located in New York, NY
Owen Weiri (also Wiiri, 1916-1974) was a Finnish-American who served in the Spanish Civil War and then, during World War ll, in the American armed forces as a marine. Industrial sub...
Category

1940s Ashcan School Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Etching, Aquatint

Nassos Daphnos, Structures (Rare Leo Castelli Gallery invitation
By Nassos Daphnis
Located in New York, NY
Nassos Daphnis Structures (Rare Leo Castelli Gallery invitation), 1963 Offset Lithograph poster/invitation 22 × 16 inches Publisher Leo Castelli Gallery Accompanied by gallery issued...
Category

1960s Abstract Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

Liquidated Louis Vuitton
By Zevs
Located in New York, NY
Zevs Liquidated LV, 2017 Screnprint 58" x 46 " Edition of 20 signed and numbered in pencil Zevs is an anonymous contemporary French graffiti artist...
Category

2010s Street Art Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Screen

Gilbert and George Major Exhibition print, Tate Modern (Hand Signed by artists)
By Gilbert George
Located in New York, NY
Gilbert & George Gilbert and George Major Exhibition, Tate Modern (Hand Signed), 2007 Offset Lithograph Poster Hand signed by Gilbert & George on the front 30 x 20 inches Unframed E...
Category

Early 2000s Pop Art Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

VOTE limited edition political silkscreen, Signed/N with five basketballs Pop Ar
By Jonas Wood
Located in New York, NY
Jonas Wood VOTE, 2018 6-color screenprint on Coventry rag paper Hand signed, dated and numbered from the limited edition of 300 by Jonas Wood on the front 20 3/10 × 14 3/5 inches Unf...
Category

2010s Pop Art Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Screen

Keith Haring Fault Lines 1986 (4 works)
By Keith Haring
Located in NEW YORK, NY
Keith Haring Fault Lines 1986 (set of 4 printed works): A grouping of 4 lithographs from the book Fault Lines by Brison Gysin with illustrations by Keith Haring. These works are eac...
Category

1980s Pop Art Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Cascade (Fine bone china plate, new in bespoke box, Limited Edition of 175)
By Loie Hollowell
Located in New York, NY
Loie Hollowell Cascade, for Coalition for the Homeless, 2020 Fine bone china in red gift box 10 3/4 in diameter Edition of 175 Signed in plate, Artists ...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Porcelain, Screen, Mixed Media, Board

Homage to Vladimir Ilyich Lenin (signed and inscribed) Lt Ed iconic print Framed
By Larry Rivers
Located in New York, NY
Larry Rivers Homage to Vladimir Ilyich Lenin, signed and inscribed to Arthur Gold and Robert (Bobby) Fizdale, 1973 Lithograph and Screenprint on Paper Hand signed and inscribed on lo...
Category

1970s Pop Art Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Screen

Original Keith Haring Pop Shop bag (Haring 1980s Pop Shop)
By Keith Haring
Located in NEW YORK, NY
Keith Haring Pop Shop: Rare larger sized, vintage original Keith Haring 1980s Pop Shop bag designed by Haring for use at his famed New York store. A classic Keith Haring Pop Shop col...
Category

1980s Pop Art Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Paper, Offset

Westermann and Kapsalis Sculpture at Four Fourteen Art Center Poster
By HC Westermann
Located in New York, NY
H.C. Westermann, Thomas Kapsalis Rare artist designed early poster: Westermann and Kapsalis Sculpture at Four Fourteen Art Center and Gallery Chicago, 1957 Historic offset lithograph poster designed by both artists Not signed 17 × 22 inches Unframed This extremely rare poster on handmade paper was published for the Tom Kapsalis/H.C. Westermann sculpture exhibition at 414 Art Workshop and Gallery, Chicago Momentum, 1020 Art Center, Chicago in December 1957. The poster was hand designed by both artists, with each one designing his respective half for a cohesive whole, for an exhibition at a small, now defunct regional art center in the late fifties -- so it's not unreasonable to believe that there just aren't too many of these out there anymore. A must have for anyone seriously involved in the careers and legacies of each or both of these sculptors. About H.C. Westermann: American artist Horace Clifford Westermann (Los Angeles, 1922 – Danbury, 1981) assembled a distinctive and singular body of sculptures. His works were predominantly made from wood through his masterly command of carpentry and cabinetmaking, yet he also used other techniques and materials such as metal, glass and enamelling with incredible precision. Without adhering to one particular style, Westermann was a maker of objects, of separate pieces: his sculptures, laden with meaning, often irony, result from the processing of experience, coalescing to yield specific fragments of reality. It is the course of these fragments that the retrospective presented by the Museo Reina Sofía follows. A concern with going back to shelter would soon emerge, be it in the home or the body —and blighted by the threat of confinement and death. Also, stubborn or helpless figures would recur through Westermann’s oeuvre. The motif of the “death ship” runs right through the breadth of his production as well, pointing, on one side, to continued wandering and latent abandonment and, on the other, to a determined pursue of refuge which seems to hold firm across his work. At the turning point of the 1960s, Westermann’s sculptures drew from mass culture, and made part of several exhibitions of the new realisms, when the “cold” tag of Pop art had not yet fully taken shape. The exhibition presents this output and the “specificity” of Westermann’s objects, which interested Donald Judd in 1963. In later pieces his work increasingly deals with the absurd, either through playfulness with language, in the confusion between work and instrument, or with references to the impermanent Besides the sculptures, the show displays Westermann’s paintings, letter-drawings —in his correspondence with other artists, critics and friends— and series of prints, in which he applied vibrant colours to address themes such as an escapist, while critical depiction of the American scene; catastrophe, and fragility. A graduate from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1954, Horace Clifford Westermann produced most of his work from a small town in Connecticut, where he settled in 1961. He regularly exhibited his work in New York, and occasionally in Chicago and on the West Coast. Courtesy of Venus Over Manhattan About Tom Kapsalis: One of Chicago’s great abstractionists, painter Thomas H. Kapsalis (born 1922) has been an important artist and educator since the late ’40s, when he graduated from the School of the Art Institute. A prisoner of war in Germany, captured during the Battle of the Bulge, Kapsalis returned to continue his pursuit of art-making, eventually returning to Germany in the early ’50s on a Fullbright-Hays Fellowship to study with Willi Baumeister. He has taught at the School of the Art Institute since 1954, and his work has been exhibited in numerous group and solo shows. Among the honors bestowed upon Kapsalis are Huntington Harford Foundation Grants (1956, 1959); Robert Rice Jenkins Prize, Chicago & Vicinity Exhibition, Art Institute of Chicago (1956); Pauline Palmer Prize, Chicago & Vicinity Exhibition, AIC (1960); Mr. & Mrs. Julie F. Brower Prize, Chicago & Vicinity Exhibition, AIC (1969). Courtesy of Corbett vs...
Category

1950s Abstract Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

Hard Edge Minimalist Etching (Geometric Abstraction) from the 1960s SIgned/N
Located in New York, NY
Brian Wall Untitled Hard Edge Minimalist Etching (Geometric Abstraction) from the 1960s, 1969 Etching on wove paper with deckled edges Hand signed and numbered 22/75 by the artist in...
Category

1960s Hard-Edge Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Etching

PINK LADIES STATE 2 - Floral Art Photography / Water Lily / Botanic Garden
By Susan Goldsmith
Located in New York, NY
Bucolic pink waterlily rests in a botanic garden. Artwork exhibited in New York in the famed Chelsea Art District. It is a Photographic print by California artist Susan Goldsmith, wh...
Category

2010s Contemporary Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Mixed Media

Perle Fine Paintings, Rare Minimalist Abstract Expressionist 1970s gallery print
By Perle Fine
Located in New York, NY
Perle Fine Paintings, 1977 Rare offset lithograph poster 22 × 17 inches Unframed, unsigned, unnumbered Provenance: Estate of Andre Zarre Accompanied by Certificate of Guarantee issue...
Category

1970s Abstract Expressionist Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

Interior of Tramway
By Théophile Alexandre Steinlen
Located in New York, NY
Theophile Steinlen (1859-1923), Interior of Tramway, lithograph, 1896, signed lower right in red pencil. Reference: Crauzat 173. In good condition, on Chine Volant with wide (full) m...
Category

1890s Impressionist Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

LOVE, rare 1960s Pop Art lithograph, signed BAT, other examples are in museums
By James Strombotne
Located in New York, NY
James Strombotne Love, 1965 Lithograph with Deckled Edges Hand signed, dated and annotated "Bon a Tirer" on the front; with publishers blind stamp (the regular edition was 20) 30 × 2...
Category

1960s Pop Art Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Monograph: Strangeland (Hand signed, dated and inscribed by Tracey Emin)
By Tracey Emin
Located in New York, NY
Tracey Emin Strangeland (Hand signed, dated and inscribed by Tracey Emin), 2005 Hardback monograph with dust jacket (hand signed, dated and inscribed for Ann by Tracey Emin) Hand sig...
Category

Early 2000s Pop Art Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Paper, Ink, Mixed Media, Lithograph, Offset

Postcard signed, inscribed by Robert Indiana about his portrait at Coenties Slip
By Robert Indiana
Located in New York, NY
Robert Indiana "My portrait was taken on Coenties Slip"...., 1993 Handwritten letter on an offset lithograph postcard Boldly signed in black marker under the letter 4 2/5 × 7 3/5 inches Unframed Unique one-of-a-kind hand written, hand signed note from Robert Indiana, dated 23 VII '93, written on the postcard depicting Robert Indiana's work "Mother and Father", published by the Farnsworth Museum in Maine. The note, done in black marker, is addressed to Don Allan II of Barrington, N.H. and reads" "DON - MY PORTRAIT IF YOU DO NOT KNOW, WAS TAKEN ON COENTIES SLIP IN NYC". Robert Indiana then signs the note.. (Presumably, the reply is in response to a letter or question this fan sent to the artist asking where Indiana's portrait was taken). Makes a great gift for Robert Indiana fans! Coenties Slip is a historic artist's address in the New York art scene - there was even a book written about it! Coenties Slip is a street in the Financial District of Manhattan in New York City. It runs southeast for two blocks in Lower Manhattan from Pearl Street to South Street. A walkway runs an additional block north from Pearl Street to Stone Street Here's an excerpt from Art in America reviewing the book: "How does specificity of place play a role in art, enough to become more figure than ground, less a context than a character? This is one of the larger questions framing art historian Prudence Peiffer’s momentous new survey The Slip: The New York City Street That Changed American Art Forever. The book vividly documents a moment in the 1950s and ’60s when a cast of artists settled, at staggered intervals, in a three-block area around Coenties Slip, a street on Manhattan’s lower tip. Coenties Slip borrowed its name from one of the “slips”—inlets for the docking and repairing of boats—that once cut sharply into New York’s downtown waterfront, facilitating the busy circulation of fish, freight, and sailors between land and sea. While New York’s status as a maritime trading hub lured fleets of boats, it was the skeletal remains of that activity, by then sharply diminished, that drew artists to Coenties Slip. In place of industry, they found vast and vacant loft spaces, cheap to rent, in which they could both work and live (illegally, owing to zoning laws)....Peiffer’s book arrives nearly 50 years after the earliest attempt to honor the Slip: the 1974 exhibition “Nine Artists/Coenties Slip,” organized for an old downtown branch of the Whitney Museum on Water Street nearby. The exhibition showcased lesser-known inhabitants of the Slip, including Fred Mitchell (the first to settle there), Ann Wilson...
Category

1990s Pop Art Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Ink, Lithograph, Offset

Centre Noeuds - Portfolio of Ten Lithographs
By Roberto Matta
Located in New York, NY
Centre Noeuds (Centre Knots) Portfolio, 1974 Hand-Signed Etching, aquatint in colors/Arches paper, with title page, colophon and poem by Antonin Artaud. In-portfolio 14 x 10 1/2 in E...
Category

1970s Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Retrospective exhibition poster, The National Gallery, Thailand (Hand signed)
Located in New York, NY
Kamol Tassananchalee Retrospective exhibition poster The National Gallery, Thailand (Hand signed), 1990 Offset lithograph poster Hand signed and dated by Kamol Tassananchalee in blu...
Category

1990s Abstract Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

Philip Treacy hardback book, hand signed by Philip Treacy, milliner to the stars
Located in New York, NY
Philip Treacy hardback book (hand signed by Philip Treacy), 2013 Hardback monograph with dust jacket (hand signed by legendary milliner Philip Treacy) hand signed by Philip Treacy on the half title page 11 × 8 1/2 × 1 inches Hand signed by Philip Treacy on the half title page. Book information: Publisher: Phaidon Press (February 5, 2013) English; Hardcover; 200 pages with over 200 photographs Review "Lovely... All the most iconic designs are here."―The Observer "How did one man change our minds on headgear? Philip Treacy by Kevin Davies celebrates [...] backroom moments of Treacy's career, no less striking than the headpieces he creates... The unseen stories behind all the 'moments'."―The Independent "An usually revealing insight into the designer's work."―Harper's Bazaar "Revealing [...] photos of Treacy at work. He looks determined and serious, but he has a kind face and he's never a poseur... In short, this is a cool book about a great guy."―VICE "The head-topper extraordinaire gets a tip of the cap in the new book... Featuring over 200 images of the milliner's museum-quality lids, including head-turning snaps of mega-fierce singer and Bond villainess Grace Jones."―InStyle "Inside the pages are 200 intimate pictures covering everything from Treacy's years at 69 Elizabeth Street to the scene backstage at fashion shows to the dignified funeral held for Treacy's beloved Jack Russell terrier, Mr. Pig."―The New York Times Style Magazine blog More about Philip Tracey...
Category

2010s Contemporary Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Paper, Ink, Mixed Media, Lithograph, Offset

Clinton Hill, Ocotillo (Cactus), 1962, woodcut, landscape/abstraction
By Clinton Hill
Located in New York, NY
Clinton Hill (1922-2003), lived in SoHo, New York, and was a frequent Gallery visitor. Born in Idaho and raised on a working ranch, he joined the US Navy during World War II and beca...
Category

Mid-20th Century Abstract Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Woodcut

New Monuments of Quetzalcoatl, Lithograph on wove paper, ex-GE Collection Framed
By Terence La Noue
Located in New York, NY
Terence La Noue New Monuments of Quetzalcoatl, 1976 Lithograph and offset lithograph on wove paper Signed, dated and numbered 1/500 by the artist on the lower right front (although t...
Category

1970s Abstract Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

I Love You Red/Gold Butterfly
By Damien Hirst
Located in New York, NY
The 'I Love You' Butterfly in bright red and gold color scheme is a limited edition silkscreen print by Damien Hirst. This uplifting and pop art work features a gilded 24K gold leafe...
Category

2010s Contemporary Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Foil

Eklat IV, limited edition abstract screenprint
By Ann Aspinwall
Located in New York, NY
Each made with only two colors, the prints are masterful marriages of vibrant autumn leaves and crystalline sky. Titled Eklat (German for éclat) these works are a stunning display of...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Screen

View of Venice II - Bacino
By Antonio Frasconi
Located in New York, NY
Antonio Frasconi created the color woodcut entitled "View of Venice II – Bacino" in 1968. It is signed, titled, dated, and inscribed “13/18” in pencil. The paper size is 24 x 36 inch...
Category

1960s American Modern Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Woodcut

Harry Bowden, (Seated Figure)
By Harry Bowden
Located in New York, NY
This print was made for the American Abstract Artists Portfolio, 1937. All the images were lithographs made on zinc plates. Usually they were signed or initialed in the image -- on t...
Category

1930s Abstract Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Leo Castelli Gallery mailer (Roy Lichtenstein, Frank Stella, John Chamberlain)
Located in New York, NY
Rare, historic collectors item: Roy Lichtenstein, Frank Stella, John Chamberlain New Work, Leo Castelli poster, 1967 Offset lithograph poster invit...
Category

1960s Pop Art Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

Michele Maria: bright yellow red Maria Callas opera artist portrait with poetry
By Rene Ricard
Located in New York, NY
Touched by the influence of Andy Warhol, champion of a young Jean-Michel Basquiat, Rene Ricard served as enfant terrible of the 1980s New York art scene. In this bright yellow, red, ...
Category

1980s Contemporary Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph, Screen, Woodcut

Lily, exquisite etching intaglio, Signed/N Readers Digest Assoc Art Collection
Located in New York, NY
Arnold Iger Lily (Readers Digest Association Art Collection), 1988 Intaglio (Hand Signed, Dated, Titled, Numbered & Framed) Signed in pencil lower right recto Numbered "77/350" on lo...
Category

1980s Realist Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Etching, Intaglio

Casita de Campo.
By Emilio Sanchez
Located in New York, NY
Emilio Sanchez (1921-1999) created this color lithograph entitled “Casita de Campo” in 1998. This signed impression came to us directly from the Sanchez estate. Estate stamped on ver...
Category

1990s American Modern Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Carole Feuerman, Shower Profile (Blue) with diamond dust on canvas, signed 10/10
By Carole Feuerman
Located in New York, NY
Carole Feuerman Shower Profile (Blue), 2012 Mixed media: two color silkscreen with Diamond Dust, mounted to linen Canvas Hand signed, dated and numbered on the back of the canvas Sig...
Category

1990s Realist Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Cotton Canvas, Mixed Media

The Pirate Flag
By Lee Wells
Located in New York, NY
The Pirate Flag, 2010 Archival pigment print with video 24 x 43 inches Edition of 3
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Archival Pigment, Video

Sketches of Auden: black drawing based on Auden poetry and Yorkshire landscape
By Henry Moore
Located in New York, NY
This black and white portrait drawing is one of a series of 18 lithographs drawn by the artist for the Auden Poems/Moore Lithographs 1974 book and portfolio. This work is from an edition of 25 printed on vellum aside from the portfolio (edition of 75) and the book. Signed by the artist and numbered 8/25 lower right in pencil. This print features a pair of sketches...
Category

Late 20th Century Modern Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Lithograph

Isaac Friedlander, My People
By Isaac Friedlander
Located in New York, NY
Isaac (sometimes Isac) Friedlander's large wood engraving, My People, 1944, reflects his genuine social interest. After a youth of extreme hardship, including incarceration in a czar...
Category

1940s Expressionist Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Woodcut

Armin Landeck, Tenement Walls
By Armin Landeck
Located in New York, NY
The reference number on this work is Kraeft 88. It's from an edition of 100 and is signed, dated, and numbered, in pencil. Always an intaglio printmaker, Landeck switched from a mor...
Category

Mid-20th Century American Modern Manhattan - Prints and Multiples

Materials

Drypoint

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