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Manhattan - Abstract Prints

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Item Ships From: Manhattan
Monograph: Francesco Clemente (Hand signed, inscribed and dated 2014 (MMXIV) )
By Francesco Clemente
Located in New York, NY
Francesco Clemente (Hand signed, inscribed and dated 2014 (MMXIV) to Nadine with drawings in black marker), 2002 Hardback monograph with dust jacket (Hand signed, inscribed and dated...
Category

Early 2000s Neo-Expressionist Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Paper, Ink, Mixed Media, Lithograph, Offset

Claes Oldenburg, Claes Oldenburg (Hand signed by Claes Oldenburg), 1992
By Claes Oldenburg
Located in New York, NY
Claes Oldenburg (Hand signed by Claes Oldenburg), 1992 Softback catalogue with stiff wraps (hand signed by Claes Oldenburg hand signed by Claes Oldenburg on the half title page 11 3/...
Category

1990s Pop Art Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Paper, Ink, Mixed Media, Lithograph, Offset

Yoko Ono, John Lennon s wife, Imagine Peace Limited Ed. beach towel/wall hanging
By Yoko Ono
Located in New York, NY
Yoko Ono Imagine Peace, ca. 2008 Oversized Screenprint on 100% Cotton Beach Towel 70 × 60 inches Edition of 1000 (unnumbered) Bears the artist's printed ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Cotton, Screen

Blues, American Signs Portfolio, screenprint, signed 66/100 by Robert Cottingham
By Robert Cottingham
Located in New York, NY
Robert Cottingham Blues, from the American Signs Portfolio (hand signed by Robert Cottingham), 2009 Screenprint in colors on wove paper Pencil signed, numbered 66/100, dated, and tit...
Category

Early 2000s Photorealist Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Screen

Rarely seen limited edition Spanish/English protest poster, Signed by Baldessari
By John Baldessari
Located in New York, NY
John Baldessari Flowers of Life for Central America/Flores de Vida por Centro America (Hand Signed), 1984 Rare Offset Lithograph (Hand signed by Baldessari) 24 3/5 × 18 inches Boldly signed in white sharpie by Baldessari lower front The separate regular, unsigned edition was only approx. 100, though the present work was, exceptionally, uniquely hand signed by the artist Extremely rare vintage political poster...
Category

1980s Conceptual Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Offset, Permanent Marker, Lithograph

HOPE for America, signed and numbered silkscreen, Red White and Blue patriotic
By Robert Indiana
Located in New York, NY
Robert Indiana HOPE, 2008 Oil silkscreen in colors on watermarked Coventry archival paper 25 × 19 inches Edition 138/200 Signed, dated and number...
Category

Early 2000s Pop Art Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Screen

Tracey Emin, Love is What You Want, Limited Edition hand signed Pop art print
By Tracey Emin
Located in New York, NY
Tracey Emin Love is What You Want, 2015 250 gsm silk finish paper. Hand signed on the front by Tracey Emin in white grease pen/sharpie 27 1/2 × 19 7/10 inches Edition of 500 (unnumbe...
Category

2010s Young British Artists (YBA) Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Color, Digital

Kimber Smith, Abstract Expressionist Geometric Abstraction signed/n lithograph
By Kimber Smith
Located in New York, NY
KIMBER SMITH Untitled Abstract Expressionist Geometric Abstraction, 1967 Lithograph on Rives paper 25 × 19 3/5 inches Signed in silver...
Category

1960s Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Lithograph

WALL STREET, German Conceptual artist, biting social commentary, Signed, Framed
By Martin Kippenberger
Located in New York, NY
Scarce framed European work by this renowned German conceptual artist - rarely found stateside Martin Kippenberger Wall Street, 1993 Color lithograph and offset lithograph on board Hand signed and dated lower right front Stamped on the back with the publisher's blind stamp, artist, title, year, edition 100/E.A. Stamped on the back with the publisher's blind stamp, artist, title, year, edition 100/E.A. (Note: this is designated as Epreuve D'Artiste (EA), an artist's proof aside from the regular edition of 100. It was based upon an original collage by the artist. However, it appears the only examples of this edition that have ever come to the public market are also Artist's Proofs (EA's). (The regular edition was said to be included in the European portfolio JFK.) Scarce! Published by the 'Politischer Club Colonia für Studien und Aktionen zum Frieden, e.V.', Cologne (for studies and peace activities) Provenance: The Chara Schreyer Collection (renowned philanthropist Cara Schreyer was considered on of the top art collectors in the world) Frame included: Elegantly floated and framed in a handmade wood museum frame under Optium plexiglass Measurements: Framed 24 inch vertical by 25.5 inches horizontal by 1.5 Artwork: 21.5 inches (vertical) by 23.5 inches (horizontal) Accompanied by gallery issued Certificate of Guarantee Kippenberger's Wall Street is full of biting social commentary about American society. In addition to the brazen text references (such as "I Love Peace and Money") and the title (Wall Street), it also depicts American artist Robert Gober's famous "Hanging Man/Sleeping Man: (in the permanent collection of the Hammer Museum). "Gober’s Hanging Man/Sleeping Man has become a touchstone of American art made during the political and social upheavals of the late 1980s and early 1990s, which included the AIDS epidemic, the culture wars, and the Los Angeles riots. The work features two images side by side, one of a sleeping white man in bed...
Category

1990s Conceptual Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Board, Lithograph, Offset

Transparency, signed/N limited edition print from pioneering British Pop Artist
By Joe Tilson
Located in New York, NY
Joe Tilson Transparency, 1970 Color silkscreen Signed and numbered 166 from the edition of 500 in pencil in upper margin Frame Included: held in the original vintage wood frame A lov...
Category

1970s Pop Art Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Screen

Double Poppies Aqua
By Donald Sultan
Located in New York, NY
Double Poppies Aqua 2025 
Color silkscreen with enamel inks, flocking and sand on Rising 4-ply museum board 
Sheet size: 52.5 x 30 inches (133 x 76 cm)
 Image size: 48.5 x 26 inches ...
Category

2010s Contemporary Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Screen

Sparire I Enzo Cucchi large scale abstract dream scape etching with screeprint
By Enzo Cucchi
Located in New York, NY
Sparire means "to disappear" in Italian. This large-scale, dreamlike print spans almost ten feet. Enzo Cucchi Sparire 1, 1988 Color etching, aquatint and silkscreen 30 1/2 × 118 in ...
Category

1980s Surrealist Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Etching, Aquatint, Screen

RAUSCHENBERG (Scarce and collectible early exhibition invitation)
By Cris Gianakos
Located in New York, NY
Cris Gianakos, Robert Rauschenberg RAUSCHENBERG (Scarce and collectible early invitation), 1970 Offset Lithograph Invitation 8 7/10 × 11 9/10 inches Unframed Offset lithograph invitation created on the occasion of Robert Rauschenberg's exhibition at SVA's Visual Arts Gallery in 1970. The poster was designed by Cristos Gianakos, with Rauschenberg's approval, who was also a professor at SVA, and the show was curated by Felice Wender, the director of Dayon's Gallery 12 in Minneapolis. The invitation states that "after completing its New York debut, the show will open at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in January 4...
Category

1970s Modern Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

LOVE Brooch, Limited Edition of 30 for Yorkshire Sculpture Park, Estate approved
By Robert Indiana
Located in New York, NY
Robert Indiana LOVE Brooch, Limited Edition for the Yorkshire Sculpture Park, 2022 Sterling silver in black gift box with silver foil detail Accompanied by fold out information card ...
Category

2010s Pop Art Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Silver

Still Life, from To and From Rrose Selavy, for Marcel Duchamp, Lt Ed silkscreen
By Shusaku Arakawa
Located in New York, NY
Shusaku Arakawa Still Life, from To and From Rrose Selavy, for Marcel Duchamp, 1967 Limited Edition Silkscreen on velincarton (thin board) paper 10 1/2 × 13 1/4 inches Limited Edition of 60 Hand signed, titled and dated on the front Unframed The entire portfolio, including the present work, is referenced in the Marcel Duchamp catalogue raisonne: Arturo Schwarz The Complete Works of Marcel Duchamp, Abrams, P.532, 344c Eager to share Marcel Duchamp with Japanese audiences, Shuzo Takiguchi - a Japanese-born poet, critic, and artist with ties to Surrealist circles, assembled an international portfolio of graphic works by various artists with strong ties to Duchamp, to accompany the deluxe version of his monograph, "To and From Rrose Sélavy". The present work was created for this portfolio by one of Marcel Duchamp's friends, Shusaku Arakawa. It is signed, dated and titled on the front - and can be exhibited both vertically and horizontally - (see photos). The present work, along with others in the portfolio, was published in Japan and is rarely found stateside. Shusaku Arakawa (荒川 修作 Arakawa Shūsaku, July 6, 1936 – May 18, 2010) who spoke of himself as an “eternal outsider” and “abstractionist of the distant future,” first studied mathematics and medicine at the University of Tokyo, and art at the Musashino Art University. He was a member of Tokyo’s Neo-Dadaism Organizers, a precursor to The Neo-Dada movement. Arakawa’s early works were first displayed in the infamous Yomiuri Independent Exhibition, a watershed event for postwar Japanese avant-garde art. Arakawa arrived in New York in 1961 with fourteen dollars in his pocket and a telephone number for Marcel Duchamp, whom he phoned from the airport and over time formed a close friendship. He started using diagrams within his paintings as philosophical propositions. Jean-Francois Lyotard has said of Arakawa’s work that it “makes us think through the eyes,” and Hans-Georg Gadamer has described it as transforming “the usual constancies of orientation into a strange, enticing game—a game of continually thinking out.” Quoting Paul Celan...
Category

1960s Dada Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Screen, Mixed Media, Cardboard

The Ohhh...Alright Issue
By Andrea Mary Marshall
Located in New York, NY
ABOUT THIS PIECE- Unframed Print FRAMING OPTIONS ALSO AVAILABLE: 23.5x17, edition of 25-This piece is available FRAMED with or without a mat in a white, black, natural, walnut, br...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Photographic Paper

Rectangle 008
By Nicole Yates
Located in New York, NY
ABOUT THIS PIECE: A study of gesture in a digital context. Nicole Yates is inspired by the landscape and architecture in her everyday life. She deducts, simplifies, and abstracts the...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Photographic Paper

Untitled Geometric Abstraction (deaccessioned Triton Museum) Lithograph Signed/N
By Piero Dorazio
Located in New York, NY
Piero Dorazio Untitled Geometric Abstraction (deaccessioned from the Triton Museum, Santa Clara, CA), 1968 Lithograph on white BFK paper Hand signed, numbered (AP), dated on the fron...
Category

Mid-20th Century Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Lithograph

The Butler Institute of American Art poster (Hand Signed by Peter Halley)
By Peter Halley
Located in New York, NY
Peter Halley New Works, The Butler Institute of American Art (Hand Signed), 1999 Offset lithograph poster (signed by Peter Halley) 38 × 21 1/2 inches Boldly signed in black marker by...
Category

1990s Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Offset, Lithograph

Everything is Shit Except You Love silkscreen by renowned street artist signed/N
By Steven Powers
Located in New York, NY
Stephen Powers Everything is Shit Except You Love, ca. 2012 Silkscreen in colors on 254 GSM Coventry Rag Paper Hand signed and numbered 18/50 by the artist on the lower right front. ...
Category

2010s Street Art Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Rag Paper, Screen

Painting-Malerei, monograph hand signed and warmly inscribed to renowned actress
By Françoise Gilot
Located in New York, NY
Françoise Gilot Painting-Malerei, hand signed and warmly inscribed to renowned actress, 2003 Hardback monograph, signed in ink with lengthy inscription to American actress Elizabeth ...
Category

Early 2000s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Ink, Mixed Media, Lithograph, Offset

Gianna
By Karl Wolfgang
Located in New York, NY
ABOUT THIS PIECE: "This particular series is a an homage to photographs taken with film. They are the result of an aberration of light passing through a locked shutter and the camera...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Photographic Paper

Abstract Expressionist lithograph, Hand Signed/N Carnegie Museum Trustee Edition
By Walasse Ting
Located in New York, NY
Walasse Ting 丁雄泉 Untitled, (Limited Edition, hand signed Carnegie Museum Trustee Edition), 1972 Abstract Expressionist Lithograph. Hand signed and numbered. Hand signed and numbered...
Category

1970s Pop Art Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Lithograph

A Muse by Dieter Roth set of ten abstract black and white lithographs
By Dieter Roth
Located in New York, NY
This series of abstract black and white Roth prints is full of movement, wildly diverse mark making, visceral, three-dimensional shapes and dynamic sketched lines. The artist worked on the same stone, erasing and adding elements with each step of the process to create a new print. Working on a lithography stone allowed him to scratch away areas with precision, revealing tightly hatched white lines that complement swaths of smokey gray. A Muse reflects Roth’s interest in permutations, decay, and a mathematical approach to making images. Each week the artist created a new variant: the series was originally planned as a set of 52. Dieter Roth, A Muse 1971-1972 series of 12 prints (this set is an incomplete set of ten prints), lithographs from stone printed in black on white handmade paper image 18.9 × 14.6 in / 48 x 37 cm paper 30.7 × 20.9 in / 78 x 53 cm edition of 30 each, numbered and signed, 6 artists copies this series 1/30 printed by Karl Schulz, Braunschweig and published by Petersburg Press, London weekly variant printed from the same stone, began October 1971 (52 prints were planned, but only 12 were executed) Condition: excellent with some dimples and wear commensurate with age Catalogue Reference: Roth 185-196 Dieter Roth was a printmaker from childhood: his first etching at the age of 16 was scratched into a soda can, and despite the failure of the can to print anything but a shadow of ink, he continued his study and by 20 was a serious apprentice in lithography to a well-known commercial artist, Eugen Jordi. Later he would continue to print and publish much of his own work. From the 1960s onward, his collaborations with Petersburg Press brought him international recognition and produced some of his most celebrated work: Six Piccadillies (1970), and Containers (1972). Interested in chance and spontaneity, Roth was drawn to make prints using unorthodox means: according to mathematical principles, using equations, or by randomly rearranging blocks before they were run through the press. The artist often printed plates repeatedly in different colors, producing many variations from just a few images. He used the printing press and materials to interrogate the creative process rather than just as tools to achieve an edition of identical prints: for example, overprinting or under-inking, or running objects through the press (in 1968, a box of chocolates). Roth was not just interested in the chance of making pictures but the unpredictability of decay: allowing the grease from slices of meat to slowly contaminate paper, immersing a print in vegetable juice, clamping metal to paper to produce rust, and pouring chocolate over a finished work. Roth would make hundreds of print editions and books over his career and blurred the line between genres and mediums, embarking on prodigious collaborations and experimentation with music, poetry...
Category

1970s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Lithograph

Blue Skies, Nothing but Blue Skies, Limited Edition MOMART UK Silkscreen Gift
By Howard Hodgkin
Located in New York, NY
HOWARD HODGKIN Blue Skies, Nothing but Blue Skies, 2002 Screenprint in Colors, Scrunched Up and Presented in a Box 5 3/25 × 6 3/10 x 2 inches Edition of 500 (unnumbered) Momart is a British company specialising in the storage, transportation, and installation of works of art. Today, the company is best known for two things: its annual artist Christmas Card, and a 2004 warehouse fire that destroyed irreplaceable art works including Tracey Emin's famous "Everyone I Have Ever Slept With. Momart's clients include the Royal Academy of Arts, Victoria & Albert Museum, National Gallery, Tate Modern, Tate Britain and Buckingham Palace. The tradition of the MOMART "Christmas card" (which would later morph into actual artist-designed work) goes back to 1984 when the first object – a festive card – was designed for the company by Bruce McLean. Since then Momart collaborated on this project with many of the top British and international artists. The complete series of Momart Christmas cards is now part of the permanent collections of the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Tate. The present item is the vintage 2002 MOMART Christmas card, designed by Howard Hodgkin. It is a rich blue screenprint, scrunched up in a box - with the printed text MOMART CHRISTMAS CARD 2002 inside the box, the artist's name and work title, "Blue Skies, Nothing But Blue Skies" and a credit at the bottom "With thanks to Gagosian Gallery London and Peter B. Willberg." And that's the MOMART "gift". Very cool and collectible! Unnumbered, but known to have been issued in an edition of 500 About Howard Hodgkin For an artist, time can always be regained . . . because by an act of imagination you can always go back. —Howard Hodgkin One of England’s most celebrated contemporary painters, Howard Hodgkin (1932–2017) was deeply attuned to the interplay of gesture, color, and ground. His brushstrokes, set against wooden supports, often continue beyond the picture plane and onto the frame, breaking from traditional confines. Embracing time as a compositional element, his work is testament to his immersion in the intangibility of thoughts, feelings, and fleeting private moments. Hodgkin was born in London and grew up in Hammersmith Terrace. During World War II he was evacuated to Long Island, New York, for three years. In the Museum of Modern Art, New York, he saw works by School of Paris artists such as Henri Matisse, Édouard Vuillard, and Pierre Bonnard, which he could not easily have seen then in London or Paris. Back in England in 1943, Hodgkin ran away from Eton College and Bryanston School, convinced that education would impede his progress as an artist, though he encountered inspiring teachers at both schools. He then attended Camberwell School of Arts and Crafts (1949–50) and Bath Academy of Art, Corsham (1950–54). Hodgkin never belonged to a school or group. While many of his contemporaries were drawn to Pop or the School of London, he remained independent, initially marking his outsider status with a series of portraits of contemporary artists and their families. His first solo exhibition was at Arthur Tooth and Sons in London in 1962. Two years later he first visited India, following his interest in Indian miniatures, which began during his time at Eton. Collecting Indian art would remain a lifelong passion, which he initially supported by dealing in picture frames. In 1984 Hodgkin represented Britain at the Biennale di Venezia. His exhibition Forty Paintings reopened the Whitechapel Gallery, London, in 1985, and he won the Turner Prize the same year. In 1998 Hodgkin joined Gagosian, and the gallery presented his first show in the United States since his critically acclaimed 1995–96 exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, which had traveled to the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Texas; Kunstverein für die Rheinlande und Westfalen, Düsseldorf; and Hayward Gallery, London. His first full retrospective opened at the Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, in 2006 and traveled to Tate Britain, London, and Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid. In the autumn of 2016 Hodgkin visited India for what was to be the last time, completing six new paintings before his return to London. These works were shown at England’s Hepworth Wakefield in 2017, in Painting India, a show that focused on the artist’s long-standing relationship with the Indian subcontinent. Starting in the 1950s, Hodgkin maintained a parallel printmaking practice, translating his visual language into works on paper. Exploring the interactions of color and space on a grander scale, he produced theatrical set designs for Ballet Rambert, the Royal Ballet, and the Mark Morris Dance Group...
Category

Early 2000s Pop Art Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Mixed Media, Screen

Equal, Hand Signed Richard Serra poster, published by David Zwirner Gallery
By Richard Serra
Located in New York, NY
Richard Serra, Equal, 2015 (Hand Signed) Offset lithograph poster (hand signed by Richard Serra) Boldly signed in black marker on the front Published by David Zwirner; Designed by McCall Associates 24 × 36 inches Unframed Acquired from David Zwirner Gallery Richard Serra Biography: Richard Serra was born in 1938 in San Francisco and lives and works in New York and the North Fork of Long Island. His first significant solo exhibition was held at the Leo Castelli Warehouse, New York, in 1969. His first solo museum exhibition took place at the Pasadena Art Museum in 1970. Serra has since participated in numerous international exhibitions, including documenta (1972, 1977, 1982, and 1987) in Kassel, Germany; the Venice Biennales of 1980, 1984, 2001, and 2013; and the Whitney Museum of American Art’s Annual and Biennial exhibitions of 1968, 1970, 1973, 1977, 1979, 1981, 1995, and 2006. Solo exhibitions of Serra’s sculptural work have been held at numerous public institutions worldwide, including, among others, the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam, 1980; Musée National d’Art Moderne, Paris, 1984; Museum Haus Lange, Krefeld, 1985; The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 1986; Westfälisches Landesmuseum für Kunst und Kulturgeschichte, Münster, 1987; Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus, Munich, 1987; Stedelijk Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, 1988; Kunsthaus Zürich, 1990; CAPC Musée d’Art Contemporain, Bordeaux, 1990; Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid, 1992; Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf, 1992; Dia Center for the Arts, New York, 1997; Centro de Arte Hélio Oiticica, Rio de Janeiro, 1997–1998; Trajan’s Market, Rome, 2000; Pulitzer Foundation for the Arts, St. Louis, 2003; and Museo Archeologico Nazionale di Napoli, Naples, 2004. In 2005, The Matter of Time, a series of eight large-scale works by Serra from 1994 to 2005, was installed permanently at the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, and in 2007, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, presented the retrospective Richard Serra Sculpture: Forty Years. Promenade, a major site-specific installation, was shown at the Grand Palais, Paris, for MONUMENTA 2008. In 2011, the artist’s large-scale, site-specific sculpture 7 was permanently installed opposite the Museum of Islamic Art in Doha, Qatar. In 2014, the Qatar Museum Authority presented a two-venue retrospective survey of Serra’s work at the QMA Gallery and the Al Riwaq exhibition space, Doha, and East-West/West-East, 2014, was permanently installed in the Brouq Nature Reserve in the Zekreet Desert, Qatar. In June 2020, a new major sculpture by Serra was installed on the West Quad of Kenyon College, in Gambier, Ohio. In June 2022, the Glenstone Museum in Potomac, Maryland, will inaugurate a new building specially conceived to house a recent large-scale forged steel sculpture by Serra. Museum exhibitions that have focused on the artist’s drawings include Richard Serra: Tekeningen/Drawings 1971–1977, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, The Netherlands, 1977; Richard Serra: Zeichnungen 1971–1977, Kunsthalle Tübingen, Germany, 1978; Richard Serra: Drawings, Louisiana Museum, Humlebaek, Denmark, 1986; Richard Serra: Tekeningen/Drawings, Bonnefantemuseum, Maastricht, The Netherlands, 1990; Richard Serra: Drawings, Serpentine Gallery, London, 1992; Richard Serra: Drawings and Prints, The National Museum of Art, Osaka, Japan, 1994; Richard Serra: Rio Rounds, Centro de Arte Hélio Oiticica, Rio de Janeiro, 1997–1998; and Richard Serra: Drawings: Work Comes Out of Work, Kunsthaus Bregenz, Austria, 2008. A major traveling retrospective dedicated to the artist’s drawings was presented at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; and The Menil Collection, Houston (which was the organizing venue), in 2011–2012. The Courtauld Gallery, London, presented Richard Serra: Drawings for The Courtauld in 2013, and Richard Serra: desenhos na casa da Gávea was on view at Instituto Moreira Salles, Rio de Janeiro, in 2014. Richard Serra: Drawings 2015–2017, a significant overview of the artist’s recent works on paper, was on view at the Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam, in 2017. Serra/Seurat. Drawings, an exhibition pairing a selection of Serra’s recent drawings alongside those by Georges Seurat, was presented at the Guggenheim Bilbao in 2022. Four Rounds: Equal Weight, Unequal Measure, Serra’s monumental sculpture which debuted at David Zwirner in 2017, is now on long-term view at Glenstone Museum, Potomac, Maryland, in a new building that was designed by Thomas Phifer in collaboration with the artist. Serra has been the recipient of many notable prizes and awards, including a J. Paul Getty Medal (2018) awarded in honor of extraordinary contributions to the practice, understanding, and support of the arts; the Chevalier de l’Ordre national de la Légion d’honneur, Republic of France (2015); Orden de las Artes y las Letras de España, Spain (2008); Orden pour le Mérite...
Category

2010s Minimalist Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

Untitled (Dark Yellow on Grey)
By Johan Van Oeckel
Located in New York, NY
ABOUT THIS PIECE: Colour, form, space and time are the main elements in the work of Johan Van Oeckel. In search for new compositions he always starts ...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Photographic Paper

Delphiniums 9
By Jordan Tiberio
Located in New York, NY
ABOUT THIS PIECE: “Liquid Mirrors” is an ongoing project— started in late 2012— where I use mylar to photograph the reflections of my subjects. I am mimicking the medium of oil paint...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Photographic Paper

Frontier II
By Tom Coolen
Located in New York, NY
ABOUT THIS ARTIST: Tom Coolen is a graphic designer and illustrator based in Hasselt, Belgium. He has an eye for nature and futuristic nostalgia. His main goal is to express our diff...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Photographic Paper

Out of the Blue
By Ruth Adler
Located in New York, NY
ABOUT THIS PIECE: Color is the foundation of my work. My circles start as a mood or idea that eventually evolves into a colored circle. I am curious how different colours interact wh...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Photographic Paper

Monograph: Jeff Koons Conversations with Norman Rosenthal, hand signed by both
By Jeff Koons
Located in New York, NY
Jeff Koons Conversations with Norman Rosenthal (Hand signed and inscribed by BOTH Jeff Koons and Norman Rosenthal), 2014 Hardback monograph (hand signed, dated and inscribed) Hand si...
Category

2010s Pop Art Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Mixed Media, Lithograph, Offset

Mid Century Modern Clown print, hand signed 144/250 Russian born American artist
By Nahum Tschacbasov
Located in New York, NY
Nahum Tschacbasov Mid Century Modern Clown, 1956 Lithograph Signed, dated and numbered 144/250 in graphite on the front 34 x 27.5 inches Unframed, affixed to matting Published by American Color Slide Co, Ltd., New York Terrific uncommon vintage signed, numbered and dated mid Century modern lithograph from this interesting and distinctive -and undervalued Russian American artist. Highly collectible clown...
Category

Mid-20th Century Expressionist Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Lithograph

Limited Edition Walker Art Center exhibition print, Hand Signed by Frank Stella
By Frank Stella
Located in New York, NY
Frank Stella Frank Stella The Circuit Prints (Hand Signed), 1988 Color offset lithograph poster (hand signed by Frank Stella) Signed and dated 88 in ink by Frank Stella directly unde...
Category

1980s Abstract Expressionist Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

4/1/2020
By Ajay Malghan
Located in New York, NY
Ajay Malghan is an American artist and son of immigrant parents from India. His mother was usually found combining cultures at home, and his father, a Materials Scientist and Enginee...
Category

2010s Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Archival Pigment

"Untitled" by Joel Shapiro (Red, Black, Abstract, Geometric, Expressionist)
By Joel Shapiro
Located in New York, NY
This screenprint has vibrant red and black tones on wove paper Created in 2006, It is hand signed in pencil and numbered from the edition of 118. 32 by 24 3/8 inches (image), 36 3/4 ...
Category

Early 2000s Abstract Geometric Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Screen

"Untitled (SK-PH)" by Angel Otero (Abstract, Screen print, Texture)
By Angel Otero
Located in New York, NY
Angel Otero is known for oil paintings of bleeding color fields that bunch and crease to create topographic textures. In this visually compelling edition, Untitled (SK-PH), the artist flattened one of his compositions into a digital print, turning his signature folds into trompe l’oeil. Here, they read as intricate line work atop a tumultuous sea of brushed pastels. Inspired by a visit to the Lincoln Center archives, Otero drew a connection between the dramatic flair captured in photographs of operas presented during the 1970s and works from his “Poussin” series. Discussing the characters depicted in Poussin’s paintings, Otero remarked, “they were painted with poses that seemed staged, like a play set...
Category

2010s Contemporary Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Archival Pigment, Screen

Poppy Rainbow
Located in New York, NY
ABOUT THIS ARTIST: Siobhan O’Dwyer is a creative artist splitting her time between New York City and Southern California. Working as a full-time pharmacist in the beginning of her cr...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Photographic Paper

Yankee Flame Pop Art photorealist Lt Ed Signed/N. Statue of Liberty US President
By Ben Schonzeit
Located in New York, NY
Ben Schonzeit Yankee Flame, from the portfolio: America: the Third Century, 1975 Collotype on wove paper Pencil signed and numbered 50/200 on the front Publisher: APC Editions, Chermayeff Geismar Associates, Inc Printer: Triton Press 27 × 19 3/10 inches Unframed Note: this is the original hand signed and numbered collotype; not to be confused with the separate (unsigned) poster edition. This hand-signed, numbered and dated collotype in colors by photorealist pioneer artist Ben Schonzeit was created in 1975 for the portfolio America: the Third Century, commissioned by Mobil Oil Corporation in which 13 American artists, including Roy Lichtenstein, Ed Ruscha, Robert Rauschenberg, James Rosenquist and others created works celebrating America's bicentennial. Yankee Flame combines the iconic images of George Washington, Coca-Cola and the Statue of Liberty into a collaged interpretation of contemporary American life and the meaning of freedom. "Yankee Flame" is in excellent condition and never framed. It was acquired as part of the America: The Third Century full portfolio. Ben Schonzeit (b. 1942, Brooklyn, New York) is one of the original Photorealist painters and is considered to have pioneered the airbrush technique. His works often depict still life arrangements that are intentionally out of focus. He received his B.F.A. from The Cooper Union in 1964 and has since had over 50 solo exhibitions both in the United States and abroad. His paintings are held in numerous museum collections including the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York, Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond, Virginia, and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. In 1973 Nancy Hoffman introduced me to Ben Schonzeit in the backroom of her gallery on West Broadway. She had been open less than a year, and Ben was one of the artists in her original stable. His large Crab Blue It had arrived from his studio a few days earlier and was leaning against the wall. I thought at the time it was one of the most impressive, virtuosic Photorealist works I had seen. That first encounter was more than a quarter of a century ago and I have always considered it to be one of the quintessential, tour de force paintings of American Photorealism. In the early seventies one could stand on West Broadway on any pleasant, sunny weekday and see less than a dozen people on the street between the Nancy Hoffman Gallery and OK Harris Works of Art. Almost all of the SoHo galleries, such as Leo Castelli, Paula Cooper, Ward-Nasse, and Ivan Karp’s Hundred Acres, could be visited in an afternoon. At night the streets were almost deserted. With the exception of Andy Warhol, there were no art world superstars. More importantly, none of the artists expected to achieve celebrity status. That was a phenomenon of the eighties and nineties. There were a only a handful of restaurants and watering holes, such Elephant and Castle, Fanelli’s, the Spring Street Bar and Prince Street Bar. Fanelli’s closed on weekends, which was a holdover from their sweatshop clientele during lunch and ragtag group of artists in the evenings. In those early days of SoHo, the drafty, raw sweatshop spaces with their large windows, rough floors, and service elevators provided large, inexpensive living quarters and studios for many artists. Unlike today, there were no boutiques. The area was not chic and with the exception of Lowell Nesbett’s showplace, the lofts were not glamorous. Schonzeit was in the same living and working space the he now occupies when I first visited him, but SoHo was a very different time and place. When the National Endowment of the Arts recommended me to curate America 1976, which turned into one of the major visual arts projects for the Bicentennial, Ben Schonzeit was on the first list of participants I made up for the U.S. Department of the Interior. His large diptych, Continental Divide, was one of the most memorable works produced for the exhibit. I stopped by his studio four or five times while it was in progress and have visited him many times over the years. We have maintained a very cordial working relationship and friendship over the past three decades. I saw The Music Room exhibit in 1978 and realized at the time that the vigorously rendered mural sized canvases and mirror and related works represented a major catharsis in his painting. In many ways, it and the other paintings and drawings based on the same image represented a sharp, decisive break with the tenets of Photorealism, or at least the photo-replicative aspects that had been so widely heralded in America and abroad in the mid-seventies. Over the years we have continued to work together. He has been in almost all of the major exhibitions I have curated here and abroad and in almost all of the books I have written. I am familiar with his studio habits, his quiet, internalized restlessness that manifests itself in the hundreds of small, unknown drawings and watercolors, doodles on napkins during lunch, and imaginary landscapes. I also know that he would rather do a painting than think or talk about it. Over the years I have followed the shifts in his studio procedure from the monumental airbrushed fruit and vegetable paintings to the most recent bouquets of flowers and decorative paintings. Our discussions of these matters tends to lapse into a verbal shorthand at this point. The following essay is based on both my longstanding familiarity and admiration for his work and involvement with contemporary realism and figurative painting. A booklet of color xeroxes with notes made up by Schonzeit was extremely helpful. In addition to several interviews, much of the information unfolded through a lengthy series of Emails. Due to our different working habits these were composed and sent out very late at night and answered by Ben the following morning. They dealt with the specifics of many of the paintings, generalities, his background and childhood in Brooklyn, and occasional bits of art world gossip. And there were odd discoveries. Prior to discussing his witty, tongue in cheek painting of Buffalo Bill, I did not know or had long forgotten that William Cody...
Category

1970s Pop Art Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Other Medium, Lithograph, Pencil

Crab Dinner
By Rubeena Ratcliffe
Located in New York, NY
ABOUT THIS ARTIST: Rubeena Ratcliffe was born and raised in Edmonton, Canada and later educated as an architect in Canada, Holland, and the US. Ratcliffe became enthralled with paint...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Photographic Paper

Jack Bush at Andre Emmerich (Exhibition invitation postmarked to McNay director)
By Jack Bush
Located in New York, NY
Jack Bush Jack Bush at Andre Emmerich, 1966 Offset lithograph exhibition poster. Postmarked to McNay Art institute director 22 1/2 × 17 3/4 inches Unframed This special mid century modern exhibition...
Category

1960s Color-Field Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

Joseph Beuys, een konfrontatie, 137 Tekeningen 1945-1979, Hand Signed print Rare
By Joseph Beuys
Located in New York, NY
Joseph Beuys Joseph Beuys, een konfrontatie, 137 Tekeningen 1945-1979, (Hand Signed), 1979 Silkscreen on velincarton (thin board) Catalogue raisonne reference: Weiss-Britsch 75 Boldl...
Category

1970s Conceptual Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Board, Offset

Untitled (Red on Blue 1)
By Johan Van Oeckel
Located in New York, NY
ABOUT THIS PIECE: Colour, form, space and time are the main elements in the work of Johan Van Oeckel. In search for new compositions he always starts from small sketches based on fra...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Photographic Paper

Untitled (Diptych)
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

1990s Minimalist Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Lithograph

Cobalt Circle
By Ruth Adler
Located in New York, NY
ABOUT THIS PIECE: Color is the foundation of my work. My circles start as a mood or idea that eventually evolves into a colored circle. I am curious how different colours interact wh...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Photographic Paper

Milton Glaser signed abstract mixed media landscape mid century modern (unique)
By Milton Glaser
Located in New York, NY
MILTON GLASER Untitled Abstract Landscape, 1965 Monotype with Mixed Media 11 × 13 inches Signed and dated 1965 on the lower right recto Unique Frame included: held in original vinta...
Category

Mid-20th Century Abstract Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Mixed Media, Pencil, Graphite, Monotype, Screen

Stanley William Hayter, Le Beche
By Stanley William Hayter
Located in New York, NY
Black & Moorhead 145. The title, Le Beche, is The Shovel in English. Signed and dated in pencil under image at right.
Category

Mid-20th Century American Modern Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Intaglio

Joel Shapiro rare poster Minimalist Sculpture Julio Gonzales ctr (Hand Signed)
By Joel Shapiro
Located in New York, NY
Joel Shapiro Poster (Hand Signed), 1990 Offset Lithograph poster Boldly signed and inscribed in black marker on the front 20 × 27 1/2 inches Unframed Hand signed and inscribed by Jo...
Category

1990s Minimalist Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Lithograph, Offset

Eclipse 14
By Nicole Yates
Located in New York, NY
ABOUT THIS ARTIST: Nicole Yates is a painter and digital designer from Portland, Oregon. She believes art enriches living spaces through an aesthetic drawn from the natural and digital worlds. At home and in the office, Nicole is inspired by the colors that surround us-the architecture, outdoors, travel, food and wine...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Photographic Paper

Tribute to Violinist Jascha Heifetz, limited edition David Hockney poster
By David Hockney
Located in New York, NY
David Hockney Tribute to violinist Jascha Heifetz, 1988 Offset Lithograph Poster 15 × 34 inches Limited Edition of 100 Unframed (unsigned) Another example of this work was featured i...
Category

1980s Pop Art Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Offset

Garden 3
By Julianna Goodman
Located in New York, NY
ABOUT THIS PIECE: Inspired by the warm light, open vistas, and saturated colors of her birthplace (Southern California), Julianna Goodman’s collages often distill memories of nature...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Photographic Paper

Niki de St Phalle Bespoke LOVE Shopping Bag
By Niki de Saint Phalle
Located in New York, NY
Niki de Saint Phalle Niki de St Phalle Bespoke LOVE Shopping Bag, ca. 1982 Silkscreen on paper bag 9.5 x 8 inches Unframed The edition is unknown but we h...
Category

1980s Modern Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Paper, Mixed Media, Screen

Christopher Wool Guggenheim Monograph, Hand signed and dated by Christopher Wool
By Christopher Wool
Located in New York, NY
Christopher Wool Christopher Wool (Hand signed and dated by Christopher Wool), 2013 Hardback monograph with dust jacket (hand signed and dated by Christopher Wool) Boldly signed and ...
Category

2010s Minimalist Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Paper, Ink, Mixed Media, Lithograph, Offset

Flash portfolio colophon page, JFK Assassination silkscreen (Hand signed)
By Andy Warhol
Located in New York, NY
Andy Warhol Flash portfolio colophon pages, JFK Assassination, 1968 2 Separate Silkscreens: (1) Silkscreen text on paper and teletype text; (2) colophon sheet in pencil and numbered XVII (from the edition of 26 (roman numerals) Hand-signed by artist, two silkscreen prints; the colophon sheet is hand signed by Andy Warhol; no signature on sheet with teletype 21 1/2 × 21 1/2 inches Unframed Note: measurements are for each sheet Catalogue Raisonne Reference: FS II.32-42 (not illustrated) Silkscreened colophon sheet of the edition XVII of the iconic "Flash" Portfolio; hand signed and uniquely numbered by Andy Warhol, plus silkscreened print with teletype text. These two prints from Warhol's iconic "Flash Portfolio" were selected for inclusion in the blockbuster Andy Warhol retrospective at the Whitney Museum in 2019. (see photos). The plaque on the Whitney exhibition (also see included photo) describes the portfolio as follows:" These screenprints reflect Warhol's ongoing interest in the Kennedy assassination, an obsession that intensified following the release of the Warren Commission report and the publication of stills from a short home movie of the event, published by bystander Abraham Zapruder. Flash - November 22, 1963 is an unbound Artists Book with text based upon the original Associated Press newswire bulletins. For his illustrations, Warhol appropriated the recurring image of Kennedy from a 1960 campaign poster, and sourced the remaining photographs, including pictures of Lee Harvey Oswald and an ad for the type of rifle used, from Life's [Magazine] sustained coverage of the assassination and its aftermath.." The present sheet begins with the following teletyped text: "THE TWO WOUNDED MEN WERE RUSHED TO EMERGENCY ROOMS, AND THE HOSPITAL'S PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEM RANG WITH CALLS FOR ALL STAFF DOCTORS. FLASH DALLAS - TWO PRIESTS SUMMONED TO KENNEDY X IN EMERGENCY ROOM BULLETIN 3RD ADD 2ND LEAD KENNEDY XX DOCTORS TWO PRIESTS ENTERED THE EMERGENCY ROOM WHERE THE PRESIDENT WAS BEING TREATED AT 12:49 P.M. (CST). THERE WAS STILL NO OFFICIAL WORD ON THE PRESIDENT'S CONDITION. ASSISTANT WHITE HOUSE PRESS SECRETARY MALCOLM XXX KILDUFF SAID "I JUST CAN'T SAY. I JUST CAN'T SAY." FLASH -- PRIESTS SAY KENNEDY DEAD. .""" (the text on the page continues; this is just a partial excerpt.) Racolin Press, Briarcliff Manor, New York Two Andy Warhol silkscreens on white wove paper comprising the signed colophon and text pages of his iconic 1968 "Flash" Portfolio, as well as Warhol's wraparound silkscreen of the distinctive teletype text. The colophon page silkscreen is hand signed by Andy Warhol and uniquely numbered XVII in pencil from the edition of 26, which, it expressly states, was not for sale. The second silkscreen sheet features teletype print describing events surrounding the assassination of President John F. Kennedy - the defining event of a generation as contemporaneously re-imagined by the most important Pop artist of the era. Warhol created the "Flash - November 22, 1963" portfolio of prints in 1968 to depict the continuing media spectacle surrounding JFK's assassination. He named the portfolio after the news flash Teletype texts that reported the assassination and its aftermath - the first major news event played out live on TV. The Flash portfolio includes a series of eleven silkscreens depicting President Kennedy smiling broadly, a presidential seal with bullet holes through it, and other symbolic representations of that tragedy. The portfolio's cover includes an image of the New York World-Telegram front page with the headline "President Shot Dead." Warhol used screen printed...
Category

1960s Pop Art Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Screen, Pencil

Print of Brice Marden s studio (hand signed by Brice Marden), Nan Goldin photo
By Brice Marden
Located in New York, NY
Brice Marden's Studio Offset lithograph poster (hand signed by Brice Marden in 2015) This print was published on the occasion of Brice Marden's 1996 exhibition at the Matthew Marks Gallery in Chelsea, New York City. The image is based on Nan Goldin's 1995 photograph of Marden working in his studio. The print was signed by Brice Marden for the present owner. A collectors item when hand signed! Accompanied by Certificate of Guarantee issued by the present gallery About Brice Marden: Ultimately I’m using the painting as a sounding board for the spirit. . . . You can be painting and go into a place where thought stops—where you can just be and it just comes out. . . . I present it as an open situation rather than a closed situation. —Brice Marden Brice Marden (1938–2023) continuously refined and extended the traditions of lyrical abstraction. Experimenting with self-imposed rules, limits, and processes, and drawing inspiration from his extensive travels, Marden brought together the diagrammatic formulations of Minimalism, the immediacy of Abstract Expressionism, and the intuitive gesture of calligraphy in his exploration of gesture, line, and color. Born in Bronxville, New York, Marden received an MFA from Yale University’s School of Art and Architecture, where his teachers included the painters Alex Katz and Jon Schueler. After graduation he worked as a guard at the Jewish Museum in New York. There, during a 1964 Jasper Johns retrospective, Marden studied Johns’s early works extensively and considered them in relation to the Baroque masters he has long admired, such as Francisco de Zurbarán, Francisco Goya, and Diego Velázquez. Marden’s paintings from the 1960s include subtle, shimmering monochromes in gray tones, sometimes assembled into multipanel works, in a manner similar to the black paintings and White Paintings of Robert Rauschenberg, who hired Marden as a studio assistant in 1966. A trip to Greece in the early 1970s led Marden to create the Hydra paintings (1972), which capture the turquoise hues of the Mediterranean, and Thira (1979–80), a painting composed of eighteen interconnected panels inspired by the shadows and geometry of ancient temples. To heighten the effect of each color, plane, and brushstroke, Marden developed the unique process of adding beeswax and turpentine to oil paint and applying the mixture in many thin layers. Marden employed this technique for the Grove Group paintings (1972–76)—exhibited at Gagosian’s Madison Avenue gallery in New York in 1991, along with related works—and the Red Yellow Blue paintings...
Category

2010s Minimalist Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Pencil, Lithograph, Offset

Silence For John Cage Hand Signed by Richard Serra exhibition print Minimalist
By Richard Serra
Located in New York, NY
Richard Serra Silence, For John Cage (Hand Signed), 2016 Offset lithograph (hand signed by Richard Serra) 29 inches vertical × 39 inches horizontal Boldly signed in black marker on t...
Category

2010s Minimalist Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Offset, Permanent Marker, Lithograph

Splash Navy
By Alberto Seveso
Located in New York, NY
ABOUT THIS PIECE: Alberto practices high-speed photography. He has mastered the balance of pouring varnish into water and using his high-speed photography knowledge to capture the mo...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Photographic Paper

Splash Navy
By Alberto Seveso
Located in New York, NY
ABOUT THIS PIECE: Alberto practices high-speed photography. He has mastered the balance of pouring varnish into water and using his high-speed photography knowledge to capture the mo...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Photographic Paper

SAILS XX; SPINNAKER OF THE VELSHEDA
By Jonathan Chritchley
Located in New York, NY
ABOUT THIS PIECE: Since 2008 fine art photographer Jonathan Chritchley has regularly been invited to attend the Classic Yacht Regattas on the legendary Cote d’Azur in France, working...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Photographic Paper

Tumbleweed, James Rosenquist neon blue barbed wire sculptural lithograph drawing
By James Rosenquist
Located in New York, NY
This print depicts the tangle of barbed wire encircling curling and twisting neon, with lengths of wood at the center. The dark paper sets off the electric blue, and captures the ori...
Category

Late 20th Century Pop Art Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Lithograph

South Sea 12
By Ruth Adler
Located in New York, NY
ABOUT THIS PIECE: Color is the foundation of my work. My circles start as a mood or idea that eventually evolves into a colored circle. I am curious how different colours interact wh...
Category

2010s Manhattan - Abstract Prints

Materials

Photographic Paper

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