Jack Bush
Jack Bush is Canada's most successful abstract artist of the 20th century. Bush was a graduate of OCAD (Ontario College of Art & Design) and a key member of Painters Eleven. Unlike his contemporaries, he would achieve an unrivaled level of success in New York and beyond after being praised and guided by esteemed critic Clement Greenberg. As a result of their interactions, Bush would become friendly with several of the artists affiliated with the color-field movement including Jules Olitski and Kenneth Noland. While many of his contemporaries explored the creative possibilities of printmaking, he only realized a small number of prints during his lifetime. His work Yellow Mark, dating from 1971, is evocative of Bush's style from the early 1970s. Several similar works from this era were recently on display at the McMichael Canadian Art Collection as part of the exhibit "Jack Bush: In the Studio."
20th Century Canadian Jack Bush
20th Century Canadian Jack Bush
Mid-20th Century American Mid-Century Modern Jack Bush
21st Century and Contemporary American Jack Bush
1970s American Vintage Jack Bush
Paper
Early 20th Century North American Late Victorian Jack Bush
Gesso, Paper
20th Century American Jack Bush
1970s American Vintage Jack Bush
Early 20th Century English Edwardian Jack Bush
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Early 20th Century Irish Art Nouveau Jack Bush
Bronze, Crystal
1950s American Vintage Jack Bush
Plastic, Fiberglass
1930s Canadian Vintage Jack Bush
20th Century American Jack Bush
1960s Canadian Vintage Jack Bush
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