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Item Ships From: Hudson
Goddess of the Subtle Matrix #2 (Abstract geometric painting, Orange & Neutrals)
By Jeanette Fintz
Located in Hudson, NY
Contemporary abstract geometric painting on 12 x 12 inch wood panel in colorful shades of orange, burnt sienna, with pops of grey and white Goddess of the Subtle...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Acrylic, Wood Panel

Goddess of the Subtle Matrix #1 (Abstract geometric painting, Orange & Neutrals)
By Jeanette Fintz
Located in Hudson, NY
Contemporary abstract geometric painting on 12 x 12 inch wood panel in colorful shades of orange, burnt sienna, with pops of citron, yellow, white and black Goddess of the Subtle...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Acrylic, Wood Panel

Archers: Academic Figurative Painting of Two Men Bow Hunting by Mark Beard
By Mark Beard
Located in Hudson, NY
Academic style figurative painting of two male archers by Mark Beard aka "Bruce Sargeant" "Archers", date unknown, painted for Abercrombie and Fitch's flagship store in Milan, Italy 79 x 66.5 inches unframed, 86 x 73 inches with a black painted wood frame Signed "Bruce Sargeant", upper right Excellent condition, ready to hang as is This vertical, figurative painting of two young men bow hunting...
Category

Early 2000s Academic Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Autumn Landscape: Framed Hudson ValIey Impressionist En Plein Air Oil Painting
By John Kelly
Located in Hudson, NY
En plein air, Impressionist style Hudson Valley autumn landscape painting of the blue Catskill mountains and sunset sky Landscape painting with a blue, green, yellow and earth toned palette "Autumn Landscape", painted by John Kelly in 2019 Oil on panel, 8 x 8 inches unframed, 9.75 x 10 inches in handmade black frame Excellent condition, ready to hang as is John Kelly approaches the Hudson Valley landscape with the eye of an architect and the hand of an impressionist. With intense attention paid to form and light, Kelly nevertheless manages to abstract the landscape just slightly, breaking earth, sky, and atmosphere down to their most elemental qualities. In this painting, the artist situates his gaze towards the blue Catskill Mountains at sunset. Green fields, turning a golden brown suggest the stages in season. Fall foliage, made with shades of umber brown and sienna orange, are pictured in the foreground. Paint is applied in a painterly, gestural manner where some texture is built upon the surface. The painting is complemented with a handmade black painted wood frame, measuring 9.75 x 10 inches. About the artist: Hudson Valley based painter John Kelly received his education from the Art Institute of Boston and Buffalo State. He has been exhibiting around the northeastern United States since the 1970s. EDUCATION 1973 74 BUFFALO STATE BUFFALO NY 1974 – 77 ART INSTITUTE OF BOSTON EXHIBITIONS 1978 BOSTON CITY HALL GROUP SHOW CURATED BY DAVID VAREANO 1979 MAC READY GALLERY JOHN KELLY, DEBORAH CLARKE 1979 BERKSHIRE MUSEUM REGIONAL CURATED BY KENWORTH MOFFIT 1984 GALLERIE TAUB PHILADELPHIA PA SOLO PAINTINGS 1984 GROUND ZERO GALLERY SURVEY SHOW AT KAMIKAZE 1984 NO LO CONTENDERE GALLERY NYC SMALL WORKS 1985 UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS, BOSTON SOLO PAINTINGS 1988 RENNSELAER REGIONAL TROY NY CURATED BY LANGDON QUINN 1995 HUDSON VALLEY COMMUNITY COLLEGE SOLO PAINTINGS 1997 FIRST THINGS GALLERY NYC SOLO PAINTINGS 2014 CHATHAM BOOK STORE GALLERY SOLO PAINTINGS 2015 AWS GALLERY GREAT BARRINGTON MA SOLO PAINTINGS 2017 SPENCERTOWN ACADEMY REGIONAL 2017 CARRIE HADDAD GALLERY HUDSON NY LANSCAPE SHOW 2017 WRIGHT STATE UNIVERSITY DRAWING PERCEPTIONS 1981 FOUNDED MAAPSPACE, PERFORMANCE AND READING SERIES WITH BOOK, PRINTED MATTER AND EXHIBITION SPACE AT THE INSTANT MUSEUM 63 ENDICOTT ST BOSTON,MA CURATED 1983 MAIL ART; DAVID COLE AND PAUL ZELAVANSKY 1984 CONTENT SHOW, PAINTINGS AND XEROX PRINTED MATTER 1985 IS THIS ROMANTICISM PAINTINGS- MAGNUS JOHNSTONE, DENNIS RAFFERTY, PETER HOSS 1985 GROUND ZERO, EAST VILLAGE STENCIL AND STREET ART CURATED BY MARGUERITE VAN COOK AND JAMES ROMBERGER ; JANE BAUMANN, DAVID WOJNOROWICZ, MICHAEL ROMAN...
Category

2010s Modern Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Linen, Oil

No. 3, Cubes (Abstract Digital Photograph in Earth Toned Palette, Framed)
By Birgit Blyth
Located in Hudson, NY
Abstract digital print on black/white photo paper 25.5 x 21.5 inches in custom black stained wood frame with black 8 ply mat and AR non glare glass These energetic prints are digital copies of original handmade monoprints by photographer Birgit Blyth. Without the use of a camera, the artist produced the original chromoskedasic image by applying the photographic chemicals to black and white photo pager and exposing it to light. The rich black, faded gold, and crisp white tones are determined by the different chemicals used and the amount of time they are exposed to light. In this piece, Blyth painted gestural, intersecting lines to create a grid-like pattern that falls back in space. About the artist and work: Birgit Blyth is one of our most innovative and prolific photographers who works in a darkroom yet uses no camera! Blyth has been experimenting with a technique known as Chromoskedasic painting since the early ‘90s and variations on this concept have been shown at the gallery for the last 20 years. The unusual process involves the use of silver particles in black and white photographic paper to scatter light at different wavelengths when exposed. A chemist of sorts, Blyth demonstrates a thorough knowledge of how the various photographic chemicals will react when applied to paper and exposed. Each work is unique with palettes that resonate brilliant tonalities of brown, green, black, and purple. Using this technique, Blyth creates abstract crosshatching grids and most recently has developed a more gestural series of 20 x 16 inch chromoskedasic paintings that explores the ethereal qualities made possible by the unconventional material. Birgit Blyth succeeds at keeping her work fresh and cutting-edge using analog methods that are being quickly replaced elsewhere with digital technology. Artist Resume: Born: Kousted, Denmark Resident in U.S.A. since 1963 Education: Denmark and U.S.A. Project, Inc., Cambridge MA (Photography) DeCordova Museum School, Lincoln MA (Printmaking) Maine Photography...
Category

Early 2000s Contemporary Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Photographic Paper, Digital

Chasm: Abstract Landscape Painting of Gold and Bronze Leaves on Black
By Frank Faulkner
Located in Hudson, NY
Abstract landscape of fern leaves in a dense forest painted in dark gold and bronze against black and muted turquoise "Chasm", painted by Frank Faulkner, c. 2007 60 x 48 x 1.5 inches, acrylic on wood panel Wire backing for secure installation Signed, verso This minimalist abstract landscape was painted by Frank Faulkner in 2007. The artist captures a scene of an abstract floral motif of gilded fern leaves in dark gold and bronze against a dark forest landscape. The floral motif and leaves are constructed with built up acrylic that creates an impasto surface, similar to a relief. Silhouettes of hands painted in black and white polka dots are captured behind several of the leaves, further accentuating the painting's alluring textural quality. The painting is unframed and the edges reveal drips from the layers of paint applied the surface. More about the work: Revered artist and designer Frank Faulkner was well known among locals for his handsome restorations of prominent historic proprieties on Hudson’s Warren Street and beyond. It is apparent that the applied arts like classical architecture, Persian rugs, chinoiserie, and Samurai armor greatly influenced his own painting style. His technique employs a rich variety of texture and color evoking the qualities of mosaics and tapestry. According to the artist, the paintings on view experiment with representational imagery. Central designs are positioned in spaces suggestive of landscapes where the settings utilize horizon lines and natural, atmospheric light. Organic compositions take their cues from natural flora endowed with fantasy, which intentionally disorient the viewer. These works present the argument for the imaginary versus the empirical world. About the artist: Born in Sumter, South Carolina in 1946, Frank Faulkner received his B.F.A. from the University of North Carolina in 1968, Phi Beta Kappa, and his M.F.A. from the same institution in 1972. Faulkner’s work quickly won him numerous grants and awards, including an individual artist grant from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1974. He was selected for the Whitney Biennial in 1975, which prompted him to settle in New York. There, he came to the attention of Dorothy Miller, Curator Emeritus of the Museum of Modern Art with a legendary eye for new talent. Since then, Faulkner has continued to garner acclaim and awards. He has been featured in dozens of one-person exhibitions (not to mention group exhibitions) in this country, as well as in Japan, Switzerland, and Germany. Faulkner’s work is owned by leading museums (the Smith College museum in Northampton, Massachusetts, for example, the National Museum of American Art and the Hirshhorn in Washington, D.C.) and by renowned collectors such as Nelson Rockefeller, Baron Leon Lambert, Phillip Hanes and Abba Eban. What a viewer first notices is the sheer elegance of the pieces, no matter what materials Faulkner uses—metal, wood and fabric as well as canvas and paper. Obvious, too, is the artist’s originality. Faulkner belongs to no school. His work is patterned but is far too intellectual to qualify as so-called “pattern art,” which mainly strives to be merely pretty. Rather, he paints in his own highly organized way, filling the surface without being excessive or boring. Faulkner sets up a system, say, of dots or dashes, then subtly changes the visual rhythms in order to add life and surprise—what he calls “the gymnastics of seeing.” He works and reworks the surfaces of his canvases, often laying down one thin layer of slightly reflective gold, silver or bronze paint upon another until the final work seems to glow with inner light. John Ashbery, a leading critic and poet, has likened Faulkner’s art to minimalist music, which achieves both simplicity and beauty from its obsessive repetitions. The critic Carter Ratcliff describes it more simply as “brilliant artifice.” Faulkner’s current work, a series of paintings on paper, continues and deepens this exploration of the relationship between wrought surface and changing light. Another striking aspect of the work is the influence of the decorative arts. Faulkner has made some paintings on wood that stand independently and fold open like screens. Other pieces resemble large tapestries, and yet others take their inspiration from Art Nouveau inlays...
Category

2010s Abstract Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Disturbance in the Field (Abstract Geometric Painting in Orange, Neutral, Beige)
By Jeanette Fintz
Located in Hudson, NY
Geometric and gestural abstract painting on canvas in earth tones of beige, tan, and light brown with accents of dark magenta, light sienna, and neon pink Disturbances in the Field, 2019 by Jeanette Fintz 60 x 72 x 2 inches, acrylic on canvas Signed verso Hanging wire on reverse "Disturbances in the Field" is a painting in a series of work created during the year of the pandemic. The artist explains that this painting is about "giving structure to something intangible, ephemeral, in-flux or conversely, revealing the dissolving of structure that has been.” As an abstract artist, Fintz has long been interested in the contrast of hard-edged planar geometry (circles, squares, hexagons) existing within an atmospheric field where shapes can float or hold the plane, in a space that appears expansive, transient and increasingly released from the canvas’s edge. A calculated use of opacity and transparency resulting from fluid washes of acrylic create an atmosphere where fragmented geometry becomes “a vocabulary of gestures”. This work merges white and faintly gold hard edge lines with gentle washes of blue and neutrals. Working in a space between planning and chance, Jeanette Fintz presents a series of paintings that fuse gestural and geometric abstraction. This body of work continues Fintz’s use of the circle, ellipse and hexagon; motifs that embody references to nature, architecture and the decorative arts. Jeanette Fintz is an established artist working in the Hudson Valley, NY. She has taught at the School of Design Strategies at Parsons the New School for Design, SUNY Purchase, and Pratt Institute, among other American universities. Her work is collected in both private and corporate collections worldwide. To read more about her career, please scroll down for see her detailed CV and biography. Artist Statement: My paintings evolve in a space between planning & chance, systems & spontaneity, conveying contradictions that I view as metaphors for maneuvering through “real “life. In this work I play a fairly high stakes game of improvisation around a motif. Using a working method akin to jazz, I counterpoint systematically repeated elliptical shapes against gestural pours & drips and something unexpected emerges. I am drawn to create complexity, and challenged to unify multiple layers through the physicality of the paint, which fuses & knits together, as well as, ultimately, through the power of color to stabilize & resolve. The ellipse, which is hypnotic & spatial in repetition, & monumental, but not static as a shape unto itself, embodies references to nature and to the decorative arts which are both alluded to in the paintings. (The egg, the mirror, the vulva, or the shield.) Dynamic visual rhythms, in these pieces, the momentum of the repetitive ellipse, are typical of my work and help to maintain order within complexity. Their sources for me are both musical, notably the poly-rhythms of Latin jazz, Brazilian & East Indian music, and are also derived from the decorative arts, particularly textiles. The latter have been a source of excitement, often contributing a playful aspect to the paintings. I intentionally disturb the regularity of pattern, encouraging discordance & uniqueness, and then bring it back home after finding another by - way to work things through. Color is my most intuitive source of inspiration, connecting me to nature; It is also, ironically, my most passionately calculated element. In the primal struggle among sometimes apparently random components, subtlely modulated color clarifies purpose, builds context, and holds the structure together. The intuitive rhythmic order of Jeanette’s paintings prior to 2009 which featured repetitive lines, circles and ellipses clashing with fluid gestural streams of color have given way fully in the new work to a given crystalline geometric substructure that unifies all visual events. This work embraces and employs the Oneness found in sacred geometry as the underpinning for improvised pathways that give each work its uniqueness. Shapes that are found have a “role” to play, to riff off some of Jeanette’s series titles. The earlier pieces acknowledge through the unexpected visual event, the imperfection of the human condition while the newer geometries strive for the expression of spiritual wholeness and connection. About the artist: Jeanette Fintz is an abstract painter, who resides and paints in Hudson, NY. She is also an arts writer and independent curator. The intermix of being a native New Yorker and now, happily, a resident of the lush Hudson River Valley is evident in her work, which combines an urban edginess with the lyrical influences of her natural surroundings. Ms. Fintz was born in Brooklyn NY, educated at Queens College, The New York Studio School and Boston University. Her personal amalgam of NY School formalist principles, and love of natural light and color was initially forged during her summer at the Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture where she painted from the Maine landscape. Ms. Fintz lived and worked in the artist communities of Tribeca and Williamsburg, exhibiting regularly in NYC. Jeanette in part, credits the importance of natural light for her decision to transplant home and studio to Surprise. Ms Fintz has filtered nature through her urban sensibility, stretching color motifs towards the heightened and intensified palette often found in the realms of design and fashion. Her pieces have a rhythmic impact stemming both from her enjoyment of jazz and poly-rhythms of Brazilian and Indian origin, which she also sees displayed in the visual rhythms found in textiles and Islamic tile patterns. Jeanette’s involvement with these resources was enhanced by sabbatical travel to Spain’s Andalusia Region (2005 & 2009) to investigate patterning systems found in Moorish tiles and architecture, and to Turkey (2013), where she focused on the Iznik, Byzantine and Greco-Roman tiles and frescoes. Jeanette also had immersed herself in textile patterns and Ikat designs during her yearlong sojourn in Malaysia, where she was founding faculty in a new Parsons School of Design affiliate in Kuala Lumpur (1996-97). Selected Grants and Awards include 2015 EYP Architecture & Engineering Award, Artists of the Mohawk Hudson Region 2015 Trustees Award, Albany Institute of History & Art 2013 Sabbatical, Parsons the New School For Design 2008 The Emil & Dines Carlsen Award / Painting, National Academy of Design 2005 Sabbatical, Parsons the New School for School Design 2005 Sudden Opportunity Stipend 2003 Faculty Development Award, Parsons, the New School for School for Design 1995-92 Sudden Opportunity Stipend, NYFA Rensselaer County Council for the Arts 1993 N Y F A, Artists Fellowship / Drawing 1990 E. D. Foundation Grant / Painting 1984 Ludwig Vogelstein Grant / Painting 1980 The Ingram Merrill Award / Painting 1975 Purchase Prize, Painting, Skowhegan School for Painting & Sculpture Ms Fintz has taught as an Assistant Professor of Art & Design, in the School of Design Strategies at Parsons the New School for Design for 17 years. At Purchase College, SUNY, Jeanette taught all levels of painting and drawing for 12 years as Assistant Professor in the BFA conservatory program. She also has taught at Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, NY, Hobart & William Smith Colleges, Geneva, NY, The University of Southern Maine, Portland, The University of the Arts, Philadelphia, PA, and SUNY, Albany. Jeanette shows her work at the Garvey Simon Gallery, New York, NY, Fox Gallery, New York, NY, Geoffrey Young Gallery, Great Barrington MA, the Thompson Giroux Gallery, Chatham NY, Cross Contemporary Gallery, Saugerties, NY. Recent projects include a solo show at Garvey Simon Gallery, NY NY (Sept. 7 - Oct, 2017), and a curatorial project, "The Ritual of Construction," at the Kleinert James Center, Woodstock Byrdcliff Guild (May 19 - July , 2017). Ms Fintz’s Residencies and Fellowships include: The MacDowell Colony, The Millay Colony for the Arts, The Ucross Foundation, and Altos De Chavon & Ossabaw Island Project. Jeanette’s selected Visiting Artist spots include Art New England, Bennington College, Bennington, VT, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH, Illinois State University, Normal, IL, Hobart & William Smith Colleges, Geneva NY. Ms. Fintz received her MFA from Boston Universtiy SFA (1975 ), and her BA from Queens College CUNY (1972). She attended the New York Studio School (1972-73), and received a scholarship to the Skowhegan School in 1975. Ms Fintz’s work can be found in many national & international collections. Collections Par Capital Management Boston MA VYV Apartments, Luxury High Rise, Jersey City, NJ Boca Raton Yacht Club, Waldorf Astoria Resort, Boca Raton, FL Liberty Mutual Insurance Company, Boston, MA, and Plano, TX Robert A.M. Stern Architectural Project, Washington DC Capital G Bank Hamilton, Bermuda Brigham & Women's Hospital, Foxboro, MA Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale & Dorr, Boston, MA Posternak Blankstein & Lund, Boston, MA Hale & Dorr, Boston, MA Analysis Group, Boston, MA National Televison, 7 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Christmas Island Phosphate, Singapore Jewish Free Loan Association, Los Angeles CA Rabobank NYC Commerzbank, New York, NY Commerzbank 2, World Financial Center, New York, NY National Television 7, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia Hobart & William Smith Colleges, Geneva, NY Skowhegan School, Skowhegan, Maine Collection of Minister of Agriculture Datuk Effendi & Datin Norwawi Collection of the Former Prime Minister Datuk Seri Dr Mahathir Mohamed of Malaysia Jim & Debbie Ellickson -Brown, Cultural Attache, American Embassy, Kuala Lumpur Malaysia (1996) Rohana Tan Sri Mahamad, Kuala Lumpur, MY Suherwan Abu, Kuala Lumpur, MY & Singapore Valentine Willie, Kuala Lumpur, MY Aloysious Goh, Singapore Betsey Swan & Chris Calder, Albuquerque NM Carrie Chen & Stanley Cohen Center Hill, Copake, NY Albert & Linda Eskenazi, Montreal, CA Barbel & Peter Starz, Toulouse, FR Clarissa & Jean Kueller, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil Mr. & Mrs. Andre Keller, K L, MY & Geneva, Switzerland Shirley Greitzer, Esq. Washington DC Mark Meltzer, Los Angeles & Palm Springs, CA Joel & Fran Soroka, Aspen, Colorado Estate of Hella and Carl Ossenberg, NYC & Palm Beach, FL Estate of Gabriel Laderman, New York, NY Stephen Westfall, New York, NY Dr & Mrs Joseph Delisi, Lake Hopatcong, NJ Dr & Mrs Chris Calder & Besty Swan, Menands, NY Carol & Joachim Frank, NY, NY Mark Pettygrove, Los Angeles, CA George A Schulman, Los Angeles, CA Gerald De Silva, Los Angeles, CA Caryl Horn, Port Richmond, CA Joe & Cathy Plumber, Cold Spring, NY Molly Doland, Esq. Washington DC Bethany Beardslee Winham, Rhinebeck, NY David Fox & Associates, Inc. Briarcliff Manor, NY Eric & Carolyn Egas, Greenviille, NY & Vieques, PR Jin Zeng, New York, NY Selected Solo Exhibitions 2017 “Worldline Schreiber Paintings, plus...," Garvey/Simon Gallery 547 W 27th St, New York, NY 2016 "The Presence of the Invisible Proposition," Koussevitsky Art Gallery, Berkshire Community College, Pittsfield, MA 2012 "Andalusian Shards," The Wall Street Journal Bldg Lobby, New York, NY 2012 "The Plaid Paintings...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Grid. No 6 (Contemporary Framed Gestural Lattice Motif Painting in Neutral tone)
By Birgit Blyth
Located in Hudson, NY
Grid No.6, 2009 (Contemporary Framed Abstract Grid in Neutral Shades Black & Coffee) by Birgit Blyth 40" X 25" paper vertical chromoskedesic monoprint 44 x 29 inches framed, custom frame with black wood molding and anti-reflective glass This contemporary, abstract style chromoskedasic monoprint was created by experimental photographer, Birgit Blyth. Without the use of a camera, the artist produced this chromoskedasic image by applying the photographic chemicals to black and white photo pager and exposing it to light. The variety of caramel, toffee, brown and black tones is determined by the different chemicals used and the amount of time they are exposed to light. Here, the artist paints with the photographic materials in a gestural, linear motion. Beautiful hues of coffee, caramel, brown, grey, and black intersect to create unique abstract, intersecting grid patterns that resembles a basket weave motif. The photograph is complimented with a black metal frame with non-glare glass. It is equipped with sturdy wire on the back for instant and professional quality hanging. About the artist and work: Birgit Blyth is one of our most innovative and prolific photographers who works in a darkroom yet uses no camera! Blyth has been experimenting with a technique known as Chromoskedasic painting since the early ‘90s and variations on this concept have been shown at the gallery for the last 20 years. The unusual process involves the use of silver particles in black and white photographic paper to scatter light at different wavelengths when exposed. A chemist of sorts, Blyth demonstrates a thorough knowledge of how the various photographic chemicals will react when applied to paper and exposed. Each work is unique with palettes that resonate brilliant tonalities of brown, green, black, and purple. Using this technique, Blyth creates abstract crosshatching grids and most recently has developed a more gestural series of 20 x 16 inch chromoskedasic paintings that explores the ethereal qualities made possible by the unconventional material. Birgit Blyth succeeds at keeping her work fresh and cutting-edge using analog methods that are being quickly replaced elsewhere with digital technology. Though Birgit Blyth began her photographic career using conventional photographic methods, she quickly became more interested in alternative processes. In the mid 1990’s a colleague showed her an article in Scientific American and it was here that she first discovered the technique called “chromoskedasic” painting, which would eventually lead her to fully finding her voice as a photographer. Blyth had always aligned herself with and been moved by abstract expressionist painting. The series of veil paintings by post-abstract expressionist, Morris Louis, was especially inspiring to her and caused her to ask herself how she could do similar interpretations photographically. In “chromoskedasic” painting, she found the answers and would begin on a new path in her artwork. The term “chromoskedasic” is derived from Greek roots meaning color by light scattering. Developed by a photographer named Dr. Dominic Man-Kit Lam, this process exploits the capability of silver particles in black and white photographic paper to “scatter” light at different wavelengths when exposed to light and chemicals. In her mastery of this photochemical drawing process, Blyth has painted lush washes of color into her own “Veil Series;” she has envisioned landscapes, both rural and urban, with melting swirls and marbled colors into rich palettes of toffee and lead. She has used this essentially experimental process to help her “see” the world around her. Blyth says she continues to be fascinated by the process because it requires “a combination of discipline, experimentation, and imagination, making possible a wonderful balance between control and surprise.” Because the chromoskedasic work is all analog, Blyth spends much of her studio time in the darkroom, which has become a rarity in the current world of digital photography. She does however, continue her preference for experimentation in numerous directions, even employing aspects of the digital age – this exhibit will also feature a new series of pieces created with the now defunct but much loved SX-70 polaroid camera, scanned and archivally printed on 24” x 24” fine cotton rag paper. Whatever the process, Blyth’s work is, as the painter and poet, Peter Sacks noted, a blend of “precision and mystery, of articulation and atmosphere.” Her images leave us with the feeling of ongoing action despite the apparent stillness; of qualities both dreamy and stark as light hits a stand of birch trees in a valley or a group of buildings in New York City. As Morris Louis evolved a style of painting that produced a complete integration of paint and canvas, so too has Blyth, with photo paper and chemicals, created a perfect integration of method and content. Artist CV: Born: Kousted, Denmark Resident in U.S.A. since 1963 Education: Denmark and U.S.A. Project, Inc., Cambridge MA (Photography) DeCordova Museum School, Lincoln MA (Printmaking) Maine Photography...
Category

Early 2000s Abstract Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Photographic Paper, Monoprint

Untitled: Abstract Painting of Decorative Leaf Motif in Bronze & Gold
By Frank Faulkner
Located in Hudson, NY
Abstract acrylic painting of a decorative fern motif with a patina of dark gold and bronze "Untitled (Hudson, NY)", painted by Frank Faulkner, c. 2007 60 x 48 x 1.5 inches, acrylic on wood panel Wire backing for secure installation Signed, verso This abstract painting was made by Frank Faulkner in 2007. This composition features a decorative leaf motif that radiates outwards from the center. The design is constructed with built up acrylic which creates an impasto surface, similar to a relief. The painting is unframed and the edges reveal drips from the layers of paint applied the surface. It's in excellent condition and ready to hang as is. More about the work: Revered artist and designer Frank Faulkner was well known among locals for his handsome restorations of prominent historic proprieties on Hudson’s Warren Street and beyond. It is apparent that the applied arts like classical architecture, Persian rugs, chinoiserie, and Samurai armor greatly influenced his own painting style. His technique employs a rich variety of texture and color evoking the qualities of mosaics and tapestry. According to the artist, the paintings on view experiment with representational imagery. Central designs are positioned in spaces suggestive of landscapes where the settings utilize horizon lines and natural, atmospheric light. Organic compositions take their cues from natural flora endowed with fantasy, which intentionally disorient the viewer. These works present the argument for the imaginary versus the empirical world. About the artist: Born in Sumter, South Carolina in 1946, Frank Faulkner received his B.F.A. from the University of North Carolina in 1968, Phi Beta Kappa, and his M.F.A. from the same institution in 1972. Faulkner’s work quickly won him numerous grants and awards, including an individual artist grant from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1974. He was selected for the Whitney Biennial in 1975, which prompted him to settle in New York. There, he came to the attention of Dorothy Miller, Curator Emeritus of the Museum of Modern Art with a legendary eye for new talent. Since then, Faulkner has continued to garner acclaim and awards. He has been featured in dozens of one-person exhibitions (not to mention group exhibitions) in this country, as well as in Japan, Switzerland, and Germany. Faulkner’s work is owned by leading museums (the Smith College museum in Northampton, Massachusetts, for example, the National Museum of American Art and the Hirshhorn in Washington, D.C.) and by renowned collectors such as Nelson Rockefeller, Baron Leon Lambert, Phillip Hanes and Abba Eban. What a viewer first notices is the sheer elegance of the pieces, no matter what materials Faulkner uses—metal, wood and fabric as well as canvas and paper. Obvious, too, is the artist’s originality. Faulkner belongs to no school. His work is patterned but is far too intellectual to qualify as so-called “pattern art,” which mainly strives to be merely pretty. Rather, he paints in his own highly organized way, filling the surface without being excessive or boring. Faulkner sets up a system, say, of dots or dashes, then subtly changes the visual rhythms in order to add life and surprise—what he calls “the gymnastics of seeing.” He works and reworks the surfaces of his canvases, often laying down one thin layer of slightly reflective gold, silver or bronze paint upon another until the final work seems to glow with inner light. John Ashbery, a leading critic and poet, has likened Faulkner’s art to minimalist music, which achieves both simplicity and beauty from its obsessive repetitions. The critic Carter Ratcliff describes it more simply as “brilliant artifice.” Faulkner’s current work, a series of paintings on paper, continues and deepens this exploration of the relationship between wrought surface and changing light. Another striking aspect of the work is the influence of the decorative arts. Faulkner has made some paintings on wood that stand independently and fold open like screens. Other pieces resemble large tapestries, and yet others take their inspiration from Art Nouveau inlays...
Category

Early 2000s Abstract Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Nike X: Figurative Abstract Black & White Painting of Greek Goddess Nike
By David Dew Bruner
Located in Hudson, NY
Figurative abstract style black and white acrylic and graphite painting of the Greek Goddess, Nike, "Winged Victory of Samothrace" "Nike Descending...
Category

2010s Modern Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Archival Paper, Oil

Balance & Beam, Locus in Transit #2 (Abstract Geometric Acrylic on Linen, Blue)
By Jeanette Fintz
Located in Hudson, NY
Balance & Beam, Locus in Transit #2, 2021 by Jeanette Fintz 60 x 72 inches, acrylic on canvas Signed verso Hanging wire on reverse Balance and Beam - Locus in Transit #2 is a paint...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Goddess of the Expansion (Abstract Geometric Painting in Orange, Pink, Neutral)
By Jeanette Fintz
Located in Hudson, NY
Contemporary abstract geometric painting on 12 x 12 inch wood panel in colorful shades of orange, burnt sienna, with pops of hot pink and cobalt blue. Goddess of the Expansion & Mani...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Acrylic, Wood Panel

Tablescape II (Abstract Framed Gouache Drawing on Paper in Beige, Blue, Yellow)
By James O'Shea
Located in Hudson, NY
Abstract gouache on paper drawing in a palette of yellow, beige and blue with accents of red, sienna, and earth green Created by Hud...
Category

2010s Abstract Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Toys (Photo-Realist Watercolor Pop Art Painting of Colorful Wood Child's Blocks)
By Scott Nelson Foster
Located in Hudson, NY
Photo-realist watercolor painting on paper of colorful wooden children's blocks in bright hues of rose pink, golden orange, and blue "Toys" painted by Scott Nelson Foster in 2020 13"...
Category

2010s Pop Art Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Watercolor, Archival Paper

Tompkins Square (Abstract Figurative Urban Landscape Painting of New York City)
By William Clutz
Located in Hudson, NY
Abstract Figurative city landscape painting of Tompkins Square in Manhattan "Tompkins Square" painted by William Clutz in 1960 Oil on canvas, signed at bottom 30 x 25 inches, 30.5 x...
Category

1960s Abstract Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Rooftops Power Lines, Five & Diamond: Abstract Cityscape Painting of Hudson NY
By Ricardo Mulero
Located in Hudson, NY
Abstract cityscape painting of Hudson, NY rooftops with accents of pink, magenta, green, yellow and teal "Rooftops Power Lines and Five & Diamond," by Hudson, NY based artist, Ricardo Mulero 12 x 6 inch oil on wood panel, Painted in 2021 Excellent condition, ready to hang as is Signed, lower left Ricardo Mulero is fascinated with capturing the brilliance of light and the contrast of natural beauty with utilitarian landscapes. Here, he abstracted the city skyline of Hudson, NY. Buildings and rooftops in shades of magenta, teal, and green are segmented in the foreground and cropped with black power lines. A soft yellow sky is layered with thin strokes of gesturally applied pale blue paint, furthering abstracting the city landscape. The piece is in excellent condition and ready to hang as is. The sides are painted a very dark, warm magenta so framing is not necessary. About the Artist: Growing up in Puerto Rico, I observed how people and nature could co-exist in harmony. Today, that principle guides my design and artistic work. My paintings are expressions that draw upon my life experiences, traditions, and surroundings. These unique environments inspire my oil paintings: Puerto Rico, where I grew up, New York City, Fire Island Pines...
Category

2010s Modern Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Oil, Wood Panel

West Wind (Abstracted Landscape of Country Field, Clouds, and Light Blue Sky)
By David Konigsberg
Located in Hudson, NY
Abstract landscape painting of a white cloud in a light blue sky over an expansive dark brown country field "West Wind," painted by David Konigsberg in 2019 18 x 24 x 2 inches Ready...
Category

2010s Modern Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Abstract Flora III: Minimalist Abstract Landscape of Dark Silver & Bronze Leaves
By Frank Faulkner
Located in Hudson, NY
Abstract landscape of a floral leaf motif with a patina of dark silver and dark bronze "Abstract Flora III", painted by Frank Faulkner, c. 2010 60 x 48 x 1.5 inches, acrylic on wood panel Wire backing for secure installation Signed, verso This minimalist abstract landscape was painted by Frank Faulkner in 2010-12. The artist captures a scene of an abstract floral motif with long leaves that fan outwards. The subject in the center is framed with a vignette of dark fern leaves around the edges of the painting. The floral motif and leaves are constructed with built up acrylic that creates an impasto surface, similar to a relief. The painting is unframed and the edges reveal drips from the layers of paint applied the surface. More about the work: Revered artist and designer Frank Faulkner was well known among locals for his handsome restorations of prominent historic proprieties on Hudson’s Warren Street and beyond. It is apparent that the applied arts like classical architecture, Persian rugs, chinoiserie, and Samurai armor greatly influenced his own painting style. His technique employs a rich variety of texture and color evoking the qualities of mosaics and tapestry. According to the artist, the paintings on view experiment with representational imagery. Central designs are positioned in spaces suggestive of landscapes where the settings utilize horizon lines and natural, atmospheric light. Organic compositions take their cues from natural flora endowed with fantasy, which intentionally disorient the viewer. These works present the argument for the imaginary versus the empirical world. About the artist: Born in Sumter, South Carolina in 1946, Frank Faulkner received his B.F.A. from the University of North Carolina in 1968, Phi Beta Kappa, and his M.F.A. from the same institution in 1972. Faulkner’s work quickly won him numerous grants and awards, including an individual artist grant from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1974. He was selected for the Whitney Biennial in 1975, which prompted him to settle in New York. There, he came to the attention of Dorothy Miller, Curator Emeritus of the Museum of Modern Art with a legendary eye for new talent. Since then, Faulkner has continued to garner acclaim and awards. He has been featured in dozens of one-person exhibitions (not to mention group exhibitions) in this country, as well as in Japan, Switzerland, and Germany. Faulkner’s work is owned by leading museums (the Smith College museum in Northampton, Massachusetts, for example, the National Museum of American Art and the Hirshhorn in Washington, D.C.) and by renowned collectors such as Nelson Rockefeller, Baron Leon Lambert, Phillip Hanes and Abba Eban. What a viewer first notices is the sheer elegance of the pieces, no matter what materials Faulkner uses—metal, wood and fabric as well as canvas and paper. Obvious, too, is the artist’s originality. Faulkner belongs to no school. His work is patterned but is far too intellectual to qualify as so-called “pattern art,” which mainly strives to be merely pretty. Rather, he paints in his own highly organized way, filling the surface without being excessive or boring. Faulkner sets up a system, say, of dots or dashes, then subtly changes the visual rhythms in order to add life and surprise—what he calls “the gymnastics of seeing.” He works and reworks the surfaces of his canvases, often laying down one thin layer of slightly reflective gold, silver or bronze paint upon another until the final work seems to glow with inner light. John Ashbery, a leading critic and poet, has likened Faulkner’s art to minimalist music, which achieves both simplicity and beauty from its obsessive repetitions. The critic Carter Ratcliff describes it more simply as “brilliant artifice.” Faulkner’s current work, a series of paintings on paper, continues and deepens this exploration of the relationship between wrought surface and changing light. Another striking aspect of the work is the influence of the decorative arts. Faulkner has made some paintings on wood that stand independently and fold open like screens. Other pieces resemble large tapestries, and yet others take their inspiration from Art Nouveau inlays...
Category

2010s Abstract Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Empire and Cotton: Figurative Painting of a Museum Guard with Portrait Paintings
By Judith Wyer
Located in Hudson, NY
Figurative painting of a male museum guard with portrait 19th century paintings of women in white dresses at the Metropolitan Museum of Art "Empire and Cotton," painted by Judith Wyer...
Category

2010s Contemporary Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Oil, Linen

41st & 10th: Abstract WPA Style Cityscape, New York City Rooftops & Water Tower
By Ricardo Mulero
Located in Hudson, NY
Cityscape painting on muslin of iconic New York City water towers against an abstract maroon, silver, and blue rooftop skyline "41st & 10th" by Hudson, NY based artist, Ricardo Muler...
Category

2010s Modern Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Gesso, Wood Panel, Oil

Minimalist Abstract Color Field Painting in Emerald Green and Black (C21-4)
By Ginny Fox
Located in Hudson, NY
Nature-Inspired Minimalist Abstract Color Field painting on three wood panels in shades of green, gray, and black Acrylic on three panels, Each panel measures 20 x 16 x 2 inches The panels can be oriented horizontally or vertically Signed on verso We are amazed by this artist's ability to achieve multiple flawless layers of acrylic paint, wiping it on and off with cotton cloth, to create a subtle yet distinctive woven texture on a smooth surface. The artist's work is inspired by patterns found in nature such as tree rings, rock lines, ethereal horizons, or water ripples. It appears as though a light source is originating behind the panel, glowing softly in a vibrant green palette. This unique surface spreads all the way to the very edge of each panel. The 2 inch deep sides are cleanly painted white for a seamless finish. These panels hang flush to the wall by resting on two nails on either side of the panel, and can be arranged in any number of ways, highlighting the work's sculptural element. Artist's Statement: My paintings merge the detailed textures and colors found in the natural world with the linear and geometric patterns visible in industrial and architectural structures. The interplay of these elements drives the work and provides a platform for constant change and narrative. By simultaneously layering and removing paint with rags instead of brushes, my hand is directly involved with the process. Each piece contains multiple panels that evoke a nuanced and evolving universe. Ginny Fox builds up each non-representational piece with overlapping streaks of paint that frequently span two or three panels. Working with rags instead of brushes, Fox’s hand moves along parallel paths, emergent colors cascading gently towards the edges of the composition's plane. There’s something vaporous to the outer layers of the work, the interwoven strands of color offering glimpses at the painting’s earthy base and hinting at the artist’s gradual process. Having received her education from New York University in the 1970s, Fox has since exhibited throughout the United States, especially in New York City and the northeastern U.S. RESUME Solo Exhibits 2019 Winterscape Soho20 Bushwick, New York 2017 Perpetual Earth Soho20 Bushwick, New York 2015 Intimate Universe Soho20 Chelsea New York...
Category

2010s Minimalist Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Acrylic, Panel

Two Sisters (Vertical Monochromatic Blue Landscape Oil Painting on Canvas)
By Richard Britell
Located in Hudson, NY
"Two Sisters" by Richard Britell 86 x 45 inches vertical, monochromatic blue contemporary landscape oil painting on canvas This large vertical blue monochromatic...
Category

2010s Contemporary Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Hammer: Framed Realistic Still Life Oil Painting of Everyday Tool in Blue, Cream
By Matthew Hopkins
Located in Hudson, NY
Small, square still life oil painting of a blue hammer against a cream colored backdrop oil on panel, framed in a light wood frame 12 x 12 inches, 15 x 15 inches framed As part of h...
Category

2010s Contemporary Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Oil, Wood Panel

Climate (Abstract Painting on Paper in Teal and Citron with Grey Wood Frame)
By James O'Shea
Located in Hudson, NY
Climate (Abstract Painting on Paper in Teal and Citron with Grey Wood Frame) by James O'Shea Abstract painting on paper in blue and green earth tones 14 x 18 inches, gouache and enam...
Category

2010s Contemporary Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Enamel

From a Window Seat #1 (Abstract Landscape in Blue and Grey by David Konigsberg)
By David Konigsberg
Located in Hudson, NY
David Konigsberg From a Window Seat #1, 2021 56" X 58" oil on canvas This contemporary abstracted landscape was made by Hudson, NY-based artist, David Konigsberg, in 2021. The art...
Category

2010s Contemporary Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Men at Work II: Figurative Oil Painting of Construction Workers in Steel Frame
By Allan Skriloff
Located in Hudson, NY
Realistic figurative oil painting on canvas of men working at a construction site Neutral palette with pops of mulberry and sky blue Men at Work II, painted by Allan Skriloff, ca. 1980's 42 x 54 x 3 inches with a custom steel frame Excellent condition, ready to hang as is Skriloff shines a glorified light on the muscles of men in hard hats that sweat and contort aboard an oil rig, elevating blue worker brawniness to an other-worldly status. This figurative painting highlights the beauty found in the every day. Scenes one might overlook are given careful attention by the artist's trained eye. Tanned skin and muscles glistening with sweat radiate in the summer sun while shadows on the construction site and men's faces contrast in the background. The piece is complemented with a custom thin steel floater frame, is in excellent condition, and ready to hang as is. About "Men at Work:" While on a trip to Australia, I was in Alice Spring. Where I took an excursion to Palm Valley. My tour guide mentioned there was gas fields in a remote section of the Outback. I said I'd love to go there and he replied, "no worries, Mate - we'll get you there.” He happened to be a pilot and we flew in his prop plane...
Category

1980s Modern Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Partly Perpendicular (Abstract Geometric Painting in Red, Orange, Green & Blue)
By Vincent Pomilio
Located in Hudson, NY
Colorful abstract geometric painting in various shades of red, orange, green and blue, with accents of white, black, pink and light yellow "Partly Perpendicular", made by Hudson Vall...
Category

2010s Abstract Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Plaster, Wax, Acrylic, Pigment

Saw (Realistic Still Life Oil Painting Blue Everyday Tool in Light Wood Frame)
By Matthew Hopkins
Located in Hudson, NY
"SAW" Small, horizontal still life oil painting of a blue saw against a cream colored backdrop oil on panel, framed in a light wood frame by Matthew Hopkins 12 x 12 inches, 15 x 15 i...
Category

2010s Contemporary Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Oil, Wood Panel

Fallow Field (Impressionist Abstracted Red Landscape Oil Painting on Canvas)
By Richard Britell
Located in Hudson, NY
Horizontal, monochromatic impressionist style blood orange and red abstract landscape oil painting on canvas "Fallow Field" painted by Richard Britell in 2020 oil on canvas 20 x 48 x...
Category

2010s Contemporary Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Acrylic, Canvas

Still Life 2: Modern, Naive Style Still Life Oil Painting of Fruit & Vase
By Darshan Russell
Located in Hudson, NY
Naive style still life painting of colorful fruit and a brown vase on a grey background Oil on canvas 9 x 12 inches unframed Signed lower left This modern, abstracted naive style s...
Category

2010s Folk Art Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Barking Betula: Abstract Encaustic Painting of Golden Tree Bark Tones on Purple
By Allyson Levy
Located in Hudson, NY
Abstract painting with assorted neutral toned golden tree bark and purple violet encaustic "Barking Betula", by Hudson Valley artist, Allyson Levy, mad...
Category

2010s Abstract Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Organic Material, Mixed Media, Encaustic, Wood Panel

Snow Flowers 8: Abstract Encaustic Painting of Green Petals on Beige Background
By Allyson Levy
Located in Hudson, NY
Neutral toned abstract painting of green plant leaves on a light beige cream colored encaustic background "Snowflowers 8," by Hudson Valley artist, Allyson Levy, made in 2020 spurge ...
Category

2010s Abstract Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Organic Material, Mixed Media, Encaustic, Wood Panel

Potential of Chance I (Abstract Expressionist Painting in Green, Blue & Gold)
By Bruce Murphy
Located in Hudson, NY
Gestural abstract expressionist painting on paper in dark green, teal, and soft gold "The Potential of Chance 1", made by Hudson Valley artist, Bruce Murphy, in 2020 10 x 8 inches, e...
Category

2010s Abstract Expressionist Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Enamel

Men at Work #5 (Framed Figurative Oil Painting of Construction Worker in Red)
By Allan Skriloff
Located in Hudson, NY
Realistic figurative oil painting on canvas of a lone man working on an industrial construction site with a rust red backdrop Palette is composed of grey gunmetal, deep rust red, black, mulberry, and golden yellow Men at Work #5, painted by Allan Skriloff, ca. 1980's 42 x 54 x 2.5 inches with a custom steel frame Excellent condition, ready to hang as is Skriloff shines a glorified light on the muscles of men in hard hats that sweat and contort aboard an oil rig, elevating blue worker brawniness to an other-worldly status. This figurative painting highlights the beauty found in the every day. Scenes one might overlook are given careful attention by the artist's trained eye. A lone worker is captured behind a foreground of metal bars against a backdrop of rest red. Shadow's cast by the man's hard hat allude to his anonymity. The piece is complemented with a custom thin steel floater frame, is in excellent condition, and ready to hang as is. About "Men at Work:" While on a trip to Australia, I was in Alice Spring. Where I took an excursion to Palm Valley. My tour guide mentioned there was gas fields in a remote section of the Outback. I said I'd love to go there and he replied, "no worries, Mate - we'll get you there.” He happened to be a pilot and we flew in his prop plane...
Category

1980s Modern Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Birds & Geometry, No. 1: Abstract Ceramic Work on Panel, Black Birds & Blue Tile
By Anne Francey
Located in Hudson, NY
Abstract ceramic wall sculpture on panel of black birds and mosaic blue and teal tile 13 x 13 inches Earthenware, ceramic glazes on panel This contemporary ...
Category

2010s Abstract Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Ceramic, Glaze, Mixed Media

Empire State Building: Modern, Naive Style New York City Landscape
By Darshan Russell
Located in Hudson, NY
Oil on canvas 21 x 21 inches in dark brown wood frame This modern, abstracted naive style oil painting was made by Poughkeepsie, NY based artist Darshan R...
Category

2010s Folk Art Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Wallpaper 2: Abstract Green Encaustic Painting of Yellow Flower Petals on Panel
By Allyson Levy
Located in Hudson, NY
Abstract painting with green encaustic and light yellow flower petals on wood panel "Wallpaper 2" made by Allyson Levy in 2020 encaustic and flower petals on wood panel, 24 x 24 x 2 ...
Category

2010s Abstract Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Organic Material, Mixed Media, Encaustic, Wood Panel, Pigment

Winter Corn Field (Landscape Oil Painting of Snowy Country Field, Silver Frame)
By Judy Reynolds
Located in Hudson, NY
This oil on canvas en plein air landscape painting was painted by Hudson Valley based artist, Judy Reynolds. The composition features a barren corn field in winter layered with cream...
Category

2010s Modern Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Rashomon (Square Abstract Gouache Painting on Paper in Earth Green Palette)
By James O'Shea
Located in Hudson, NY
Abstract gouache on paper painting in earth green tones created by Hudson Valley based artist, James O'Shea in 2017. 12 x 12 x 1.5 inches in handmade white wood frame with 8-ply whit...
Category

2010s Abstract Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Gouache, Archival Paper

American Beauty, 14, bright multicolored surreal landscape painting, mountains
By Lily Prince
Located in New York, NY
My works give the viewer the sense of flying through them, hovering, as the earth shifts in subtle twists and turns. This slightly unsettling vantage point merges with vivid color, p...
Category

2010s Contemporary Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Blade (Framed Realistic Still Life Oil Painting of Grey Utility Knife on Beige)
By Matthew Hopkins
Located in Hudson, NY
Small, square still life oil painting of a grey utility knife against a cream colored backdrop "Blade" by Matthew Hopkins, painted in 2020 oil on panel, ...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Modern Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Oil, Wood Panel

Minimalist Abstract Color Field Painting in Light Blue, White & Grey (C20-9)
By Ginny Fox
Located in Hudson, NY
Nature-Inspired Minimalist Abstract Color Field painting on two wood panels in shades of light, icy blue, white and grey Acrylic on two wood panel, Each panel is 18 x 24 x 1.5 inche...
Category

2010s Minimalist Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Acrylic, Panel

#5264 Wilber McIntyre's Wagons: Impressionist En Plein Air Landscape on Linen
By Harry Orlyk
Located in Hudson, NY
Impressionist style en plein air landscape painting of rural country farm in a warm autumnal palette #5264 Wilber McIntyre's Wagons, painted by Harry Orlyk in 2015 oil on linen, ready to hang as is 15.5 x 16.5 inches unframed Signed lower right corner Harry Orlyk is celebrated for his ability to capture rural country landscapes with impressionistic brushstrokes and bright color palettes. Painting daily, the artist drives throughout the upstate New York, stopping to observe and paint 'en plain air' whenever and wherever a landscape strikes him. Orlyk prefers to leave his canvases unframed to reveal the exposed linen which are nailed to sturdy homasote boards for easy installation. This painting is a perfect example of Orlyk's impressionistic aesthetic. Here, the artist captures a peaceful, everyday, country landscape in a range of warm, golden tones. Orlyk's signature use of soft yellows creates a gently luminous atmosphere. The scene is made with gestural strokes of paint that culminate onto a textured, impasto surface. The artist's signature is located in the lower right corner. The artist prefers to leave his paintings unframed. The painting can be installed with one nail, hammered behind the linen and through the homasote board. About the artist: Harry Orlyk was born in Troy, New York in 1947. In 1971 after graduating college, he went on to graduate school at the University of Nebraska at Lincoln . Over the next nine years, he was influenced by several Nebraskan artists. "Still-life painter Robin Smith taught me how to use paint without turpentine - to paint from the tube." He also admits the influence of photographer Lawrence McFarland who taught him what spiritual space was, and how to emphasize it. Lastly he credits well-known Lincoln painter Keith Jacobshagen...
Category

2010s Impressionist Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Linen, Oil

Untitled II (Abstract Cityscape Painting of Skyline & Water Tower in Red & Blue)
By Ricardo Mulero
Located in Hudson, NY
Abstracted cityscape painting on paper in blue and red oil wash of industrial beams and water towers in New York City "Untitled II," painted by Ricardo Mulero in 2018 7.5 x 5 inches, oil wash on paper 16.5 x 13.5 inches in a soft white wood frame with an 8-ply window mat and non-glare glass Excellent condition, ready to hang as is Ricardo Mulero is fascinated with capturing the brilliance of light and the contrast of natural beauty with utilitarian landscapes. Here, Mulero focuses on an abstracted New York cityscape of rooftop water towers and he fragments the industrial urban landscape to highlight bold shapes with contrasting color palettes in blue, black, and red. The piece is in excellent condition and ready to hang. About the Artist: Growing up in Puerto Rico, I observed how people and nature could co-exist in harmony. Today, that principle guides my design and artistic work. My paintings are expressions that draw upon my life experiences, traditions, and surroundings. These unique environments inspire my oil paintings: Puerto Rico, where I grew up, New York City, Fire Island Pines...
Category

2010s Modern Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Oil, Archival Paper

Winter Solstice Sunrise on North 5th: Cityscape Painting of Hudson NY
By Ricardo Mulero
Located in Hudson, NY
Cityscape painting on wood panel of Hudson, NY with a purple rooftop against a golden yellow and orange winter sunset and black silhouettes of trees in the distance in purple violet red orange and yellow "Winter Solstice Sunrise on North 5th," by Hudson, NY based artist, Ricardo Mulero 9 x 12 inch oil on wood panel, Painted in 2020 Framed with a custom dark wood Larson Juhl frame Excellent condition, ready to hang as is Ricardo Mulero is fascinated with capturing the brilliance of light and the contrast of natural beauty with utilitarian landscapes. Here, he focuses on the intense golden glow of a winter sunset against a small town skyline. The painting has a smooth texture with no impasto on the surface and is complemented with a dark wood, Larson Juhl floater frame. It's in excellent condition and ready to hang as is. About the Artist: Growing up in Puerto Rico, I observed how people and nature could co-exist in harmony. Today, that principle guides my design and artistic work. My paintings are expressions that draw upon my life experiences, traditions, and surroundings. These unique environments inspire my oil paintings: Puerto Rico, where I grew up, New York City, Fire Island Pines...
Category

2010s Modern Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Oil, Wood Panel

Saw Mill (Impressionist Monochromatic Blue Landscape Oil Painting on Canvas)
By Richard Britell
Located in Hudson, NY
Horizontal, monochromatic impressionist style navy blue abstract landscape oil painting on canvas "Saw Mill" painted by Richard Britell in 2020 oil on canvas ...
Category

2010s Modern Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

Untitled I (Abstracted Cityscape Painting of Skyline & Water Towers in Blue)
By Ricardo Mulero
Located in Hudson, NY
Abstracted cityscape painting on paper in blue, black, grey and white oil wash of an industrial New York City rooftop "Untitled I," painted by Ricardo Mulero in 2018 7.5 x 5 inches, oil wash on paper 16.5 x 13.5 inches in a soft white wood frame with an 8-ply window mat and non-glare glass Excellent condition, ready to hang as is Ricardo Mulero is fascinated with capturing the brilliance of light and the contrast of natural beauty with utilitarian landscapes. Here, Mulero focuses on an abstracted New York City rooftop where water towers stand in the distance. Contrasts in light and shadow accentuate the urban landscape's geometric forms and highlight bold color palettes of blue, black, and grey. The piece is in excellent condition and ready to hang. About the Artist: Growing up in Puerto Rico, I observed how people and nature could co-exist in harmony. Today, that principle guides my design and artistic work. My paintings are expressions that draw upon my life experiences, traditions, and surroundings. These unique environments inspire my oil paintings: Puerto Rico, where I grew up, New York City, Fire Island Pines...
Category

2010s Modern Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Archival Paper, Oil

Untitled 24 (Modern Black Charcoal & Gray Abstract Still Life Drawing on Paper)
By Ralph Stout
Located in Hudson, NY
18 x 14 inch drawing on 20 x 16 inch Aquarelle Arches Paper 24 x 20 x .5 inches framed Thin profile black metal frame, 8 ply white mat Ralph Stout's works on paper reveal a drau...
Category

Early 2000s Abstract Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Archival Paper, Charcoal

Pink Monday (Abstract Expressionist Painting in Pink, Silver & Violet)
By Bruce Murphy
Located in Hudson, NY
Pink Monday, 2020 by Bruce Murphy Gestural abstract expressionist painting on paper in colorful hues pink, rust, green, yellow, gold, and red mounted on wood panel 28" X 22" enamel ...
Category

2010s Abstract Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Enamel

American Beauty, 12, bright multicolored surreal landscape painting, mountains
By Lily Prince
Located in New York, NY
My works give the viewer the sense of flying through them, hovering, as the earth shifts in subtle twists and turns. This slightly unsettling vantage point merges with vivid color, p...
Category

2010s Contemporary Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic

No. 4, Cubes (Abstract Cameraless Photograph in Earth Toned Palette, Framed)
By Birgit Blyth
Located in Hudson, NY
Abstract digital print on black/white photo paper 25.5 x 21.5 inches in custom black stained wood frame with black 8 ply mat and AR non glare glass These energetic prints are digital copies of original handmade monoprints by Danish photographer Birgit Blyth. Without the use of a camera, the artist produced the original chromoskedasic image by painting with photographic chemicals directly onto black and white photo pager and exposing it to light. The rich black, faded gold, and crisp white tones are determined by the different chemicals used and the amount of time they are exposed to light. In this piece, Blyth painted gestural, intersecting lines to create a grid-like pattern that falls back in space. About the artist and work: Birgit Blyth is one of our most innovative and prolific photographers who works in a darkroom yet uses no camera! Blyth has been experimenting with a technique known as Chromoskedasic painting since the early ‘90s and variations on this concept have been shown at the gallery for the last 20 years. The unusual process involves the use of silver particles in black and white photographic paper to scatter light at different wavelengths when exposed. A chemist of sorts, Blyth demonstrates a thorough knowledge of how the various photographic chemicals will react when applied to paper and exposed. Each work is unique with palettes that resonate brilliant tonalities of brown, green, black, and purple. Using this technique, Blyth creates abstract crosshatching grids and most recently has developed a more gestural series of 20 x 16 inch chromoskedasic paintings that explores the ethereal qualities made possible by the unconventional material. Birgit Blyth succeeds at keeping her work fresh and cutting-edge using analog methods that are being quickly replaced elsewhere with digital technology. Artist Resume: Born: Kousted, Denmark Resident in U.S.A. since 1963 Education: Denmark and U.S.A. Project, Inc., Cambridge MA (Photography) DeCordova Museum School, Lincoln MA (Printmaking) Maine...
Category

Early 2000s Abstract Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Photographic Paper, Digital

At the Slurry Pit: Impressionist En Plein Air Landscape of Hay Field at Sunset
By Harry Orlyk
Located in Hudson, NY
Impressionist style en plein air landscape painting of rural country hay field at sunset with robin egg's blue sky and yellow clouds #5790 At the Slurry Pit, painted by Harry Orlyk i...
Category

2010s Impressionist Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Linen, Oil

Burning Fog Over NYC: Abstract Color Field Landscape Painting of New York City
By Ricardo Mulero
Located in Hudson, NY
Abstract color-field landscape painting of the New York City skyline against an ethereal soft blue and red hazy sky "Burning Fog Over NYC" by Hudson, NY based artist, Ricardo Mulero,...
Category

2010s Color-Field Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Gesso, Muslin, Oil, Panel, Wood Panel

Big Little 129 (Striped Abstract Geometric Painting in Tones of Yellow & Red)
By Vincent Pomilio
Located in Hudson, NY
Big Little 119 (Striped Abstract Geometric Painting in Tones of Blue & Red) by Vincent Pomilio Colorful abstract painting on panel made with mixed media in tones of Yellow Pink & bu...
Category

2010s Abstract Geometric Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Marble

Lightening (Square Abstract Encaustic & Enamel Painting on Wood in Mint Green)
By James O'Shea
Located in Hudson, NY
Modern, abstract wood construction painting in mint green, teal, navy and sienna. Encaustic on wood panel 12 x 12 inches James O'Shea has been praised for years for his work as a co...
Category

2010s Abstract Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Enamel

Hayfield Two Thirty (Abstracted Landscape of Country Field by David Konigsberg)
By David Konigsberg
Located in Hudson, NY
Abstract landscape painting of a white cloud in a light blue sky over a dark country field "Hayfield Two Thirty," painted by David Konigsberg in 2019 oil o...
Category

2010s Modern Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

Come In, figurative oil painting of man and woman, 1950s, green
By Kathy Osborn
Located in New York, NY
Couple / Love / Romance / Kathy Osborn paints highly detailed, interior scenes, inspired by imagery from the Post-War era of the 1950s and 60s. Osborn’s multi-step process begins w...
Category

2010s Contemporary Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Oil, Paper, Board

Boatyard Lift (Photo-realist Oil Painting of a Red & Yellow Crane on Blue)
Located in Hudson, NY
Large, photo-realist painting on canvas featuring a crimson red and yellow industrial boatyard lift against a bright sky blue background 47 x 31 x 2 inches oil on canvas, thin wood stripping signed verso, "Joseph E. Richards" Hangs with wire installed on the back This precisely detailed photo-realist painting was made by Joseph E. Richards in 2001. The artist painted this piece when he was 71 years old during a long career of painting trains, cargo ships, and industrial machinery. Richards served in the US Navy during WWII and went on to study at the American Academy of Art in Chicago and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia before showing with Ivan Karp of O.K. Harris Gallery in NYC. The artist moved upstate to Hillsdale, NY for the later years of his life. This painting captures one of Richards' most beloved subjects, industrial cranes. With a photo-realist approach to the subject, Richards was able to capture detailed changes in light and shadow, shape and form. The red and yellow crane, painted with extreme detail and focus, vividly contrasts against a bright blue sky. Areas of brown rust, attesting to the machine's power and longevity, are captured with immaculate precision. Since the painting has a very smooth surface, one could easily mistake this painting with a photograph. It is not until you examine the painting up close, do you realize the artist's calculated brushwork. The painting is framed with natural wood stripping. The work is lightweight and easy to hang with pre-installed wire. The artist's signature is located on the back of the canvas. About the artist: Joseph Richards’ precisely painted canvases of giant cranes, cargo booms, propellers and train engines are fueled with a fascination like that of a six-year old boy. Working directly from photographs, Richards unites light and color together as one element, evident in the reflective surfaces of steel. The otherwise mundane signs of corrosive wear are magnified; rust stains glow on the canvas and yellow painted pulleys radiate like beacons against a bright, blue sky. Richards finds beauty in their dramatic color, resilient texture, definitive form and functionality. Richards paints sections of these objects in grand scale, with canvases up to 6 feet long and eye-popping color, calling attention to their massive proportions and exceptional strength. Richards had solo exhibits in New York City, Scottsdale AZ, and Washington DC, and his work is found in private and corporate collections here and abroad, e.g., the Tucson Museum of Fine Arts, Mobil Oil, Lankenau Hospital in Philadelphia, and E. Jean Belloni in Geneva, Switzerland. Resume: Born in 1921 in Des Moines, Iowa, Joseph Richards left for Chicago after high school to pursue a career in art. After serving in the U.S. Navy from 1942 – 1945, he went on to study at the American Academy of Art in Chicago and the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia. He eventually settled with his wife, Betty, in New York City. In 1969, longtime dealer Ivan Karp opened The OK Harris Gallery on West Broadway in Manhattan’s SoHo. Karp was at the forefront of the Photorealism movement, showing artists such as Duane Hanson and Manny Farber...
Category

Early 2000s Photorealist Hudson - Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil

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