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Jack Tinkle
Cubist Inspired Figurative Painting

1950s

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  • Abstract Cubist Colorado Red Tonal Landscape
    By Norman Baasch
    Located in Houston, TX
    Warm toned cubist Colorado cityscape of geometric buildings and trees by artist Norman Baasch in 1968. Signed and dated by artist. The canvas is not framed.
    Category

    1960s Cubist Landscape Paintings

    Materials

    Oil

  • "Out Go the Lights" Contemporary Orange, Blue & Purple Tone Color Field Painting
    Located in Houston, TX
    Contemporary abstract painting by Houston-based artist Gary Griffin. The work features a central amorphous shape created with diffused layers of black, pink, and orange paint against an off-white background. Signed and titled on the reverse. Recently featured in "No Zoning! A Very Houston Show" at Reeves Art + Design in Houston, TX. Currently unframed, but options are available. Artist Biography: As the son of deaf parents, Gary became a visual communicator at a very early age. Being able to “watch” conversations his parents had with their deaf friends, before he was able to read and write, informed practically every aspect of his thinking. Fascinated with design, color, light and composition, Gary set about photographing the world around him. Everything from West Texas landscapes...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Oil, Canvas

  • "Mars Rising Over Flesh" Contemporary Yellow & Green Abstract Diptych Painting
    Located in Houston, TX
    Exhibited in "Benji Stiles: A Human Day" at Reeves Art + Design. In “A Human Day,” a solo show dedicated to the work of contemporary multidisciplinary artist Benji Stiles, we explor...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Oil

  • "Yellow Corner" Contemporary Pastel Abstract Expressionist Oil Painting
    Located in Houston, TX
    Exhibited in "Benji Stiles: A Human Day" at Reeves Art + Design. In “A Human Day,” a solo show dedicated to the work of contemporary multidisciplinary artist Benji Stiles, we explor...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Oil

  • "Innervision" Contemporary Blue, Orange, Yellow & Pink Tone Color Field Painting
    Located in Houston, TX
    Contemporary abstract painting by Houston-based artist Gary Griffin. The work features a central amorphous shape created with diffused layers of blue, pin...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Oil

  • "Recall" Contemporary Blue, Orange, Yellow, & Pink Tone Color Field Painting
    Located in Houston, TX
    Contemporary abstract painting by Houston-based artist Gary Griffin. The work features a central amorphous shape created with diffused layers of blue, pin...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Abstract Paintings

    Materials

    Canvas, Oil

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    By Claude Venard
    Located in Shrewsbury, Shropshire
    ‘Sacre Coeur Sunset' is a wonderful stark cubist cityscape - full of interesting textures and angles. The scratches into the impasto created by his paint brush are also distinctive. ...
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  • "Tabac" Charles Green Shaw, Tobacco, Smoking, Park Ave Cubist, AAA
    By Charles Green Shaw
    Located in New York, NY
    Charles Green Shaw Tabac, circa 1935 Signed on the reverse Oil on canvasboard 5 3/4 x 8 3/4 inches Provenance: Washburn Gallery, New York, 1982 Private Collection (acquired from the above) Christie's, The Collector, October 20, 2021, Lot 307 Private Collection, Scarsdale, New York (acquired directly from the above) Literature: Hilton Kramer, "Charles Shaw: In the Minimal Tradition," New York Times, February 21, 1982, Section 2, p. 25. Charles Green Shaw was born in 1892 to a wealthy New York family. He lost both his parents at a very young age; his mother died when he was just three years old. Despite the early loss of his parents, Shaw lived the whimsical life of a New York socialite. As a beneficiary to an inheritance based in part upon the Woolworth fortune, he was brought up surrounded by the well-bred, well-groomed and well-moneyed citizens of New York’s elite social class. His social status as an adolescent was cultivated while spending summers in Newport and attending Christmas balls at Mrs. W.K. Vanderbilt’s. At age six, Shaw began to take an interest in drawing, and by nine, he was known to have a fondness for sketching historical costumes. After graduating from Yale University in 1914, Shaw spent a year studying at Columbia University’s School of Architecture. Subsequently he served for eighteen months as a Lieutenant in World War I. After his service, Shaw returned to New York and tried his hand as a businessman selling real estate, but his attempt was short lived. In the early 1920s, Shaw began his career as a journalist and novelist. He achieved professional success, writing consistently for magazines such as The New Yorker, Vanity Fair and The Smart Set. Shaw’s writing was a record of his approvals and disapprovals of the social crowd to which he belonged. His profession along with his social pedigree, brought him in contact with a number of the most significant figures of the 1920s such as, F. Scott Fitzgerald, Sinclair Lewis, George Gershwin, George Jean Nathan and the American artist George Luks. Some of his profiles included celebrity caricatures used as illustrations, these were the publics’ first look at Shaw’s artistic ability. In 1928, a collection of Shaw’s articles and interviews were published in one volume titled, The Low Down. Just previous to the stock market crash and the end of the Jazz Age, Shaw left New York and traveled to Paris and London. He arrived in Paris in 1929. In an autobiographical note Shaw suggests it was on this trip when he first began to paint seriously. London also acted as a great source of motivation for the budding artist. He began to sketch everyday in St. James’s Park, making large pastels of its vistas in the style of Cezanne. When he returned to New York in 1932, Shaw considered himself a painter. Success for Shaw came quickly with his first solo exhibition mounted at the Valentine Gallery in 1934. The following year Albert Eugene Gallatin included works by the artist in an unprecedented solo exhibition at his Gallery of Living Art at New York University. Shaw further cemented his reputation as an artist through his association and friendship with fellow abstract artists Morris and Gallatin. The trio soon was regarded as ‘the Park Avenue Cubists’. As a founding member of the American Abstract Artists, Shaw became an impassioned defender of the style. His 1938 essay in the American Abstract Artists yearbook, “A Word to the Objector”, acted as a defense against those who failed to see the illustrative quality of abstract art and scolded those who disregarded American artists as serious Abstractionists. He was also an influential force at the Museum of Modern Art, where he sat on the Advisory Board from 1936 to 1941. In the later years of Shaw’s life he continued to produce abstract paintings, yet in a more private manner. He was known to be a reserved man— a ‘gentleman’; not much is known about his personal life in these later years. During this time he maintained his career as a writer, publishing the well-known children’s book, It Looked Like Spilt Milk in 1940 and two books of poems in 1959 and 1962. In 1974, Shaw died...
    Category

    1930s Cubist Landscape Paintings

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    Oil, Board

  • 20th Century French Cubist Oil Painting Street View at Night Time
    Located in Cirencester, Gloucestershire
    Artist/ School: French 20th Century artist Title: Cubist street scene at dusk Medium: oil painting on canvas, unframed. canvas: 25.5 x 21.25 inches Provenance: private collectio...
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  • The Golden Rule, Color Field, Abstract Geometric Landscape in Pastel Tones, 2022
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    Located in Barcelona, ES
    "The Golden Rule" is an abstract painting by Spanish artist Natalia Roman. These color field paintings are inspired by both modernist shapes of the fifties and sixties combined with ...
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  • Ascension
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  • A Cubist French City, 1919
    Located in Stockholm, SE
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