#ArtWiseUP: Modern & Contemporary Popular Favorites

#ArtWiseUP: Modern & Contemporary Popular Favorites

Online Exhibition New York, NY 11201, USA Friday, January 11, 2019–Monday, February 11, 2019

Although there are many artists who contribute, in small ways or large ones, to a grand sweeping movement in culture and time, a handful of popular ones continue to surface above the others again and again—artists whose work ...

derriere le miroir no. 27-28 cover by marc chagall

Marc Chagall

Derriere Le Miroir no. 27-28 Cover

Price on Request

the song of songs by marc chagall

Marc Chagall

The Song of Songs, 1975

Price on Request

a closer grand canyon by david hockney

David Hockney

A Closer Grand Canyon, 2011

Price on Request

corbusier chair and rug (sm) by david hockney

David Hockney

Corbusier Chair and Rug (sm), 1969

Price on Request

celia in a black dress with colored border by david hockney

David Hockney

Celia In A Black Dress With Colored Border, 1981

Price on Request

gravure sur bois 8 by joan miró

Joan Miró

Gravure sur Bois 8, 1958

Price on Request

cote d'azur by pablo picasso

Pablo Picasso

Cote D'Azur, 1968

Price on Request

guernica by pablo picasso

Pablo Picasso

Guernica, 2017

Price on Request

Although there are many artists who contribute, in small ways or large ones, to a grand sweeping movement in culture and time, a handful of popular ones continue to surface above the others again and again—artists whose work, throughout stylistic shifts or genre changes, maintained a level of beauty, inspiration and talent that has left an indelible mark in the history of art. Their blissful visions seem somehow always fresh even in today’s climate, and always enriching to the environments in which they find a home. There is certainly something timeless about great art that has tapped into the living voice of a keen creator.

David Hockney has proved an ability to keep his finger on the pulse, his dramatically varied body of work showing colors on the stylistic scale that never existed before he arrived. Throughout the many different tones of Hockney over six decades of work, his enigmatic spirit never fails to pierce through. Celia In A Black Dress With Colored Border is a stone lithograph from 1981 featuring one of his oft-revisited subjects, andCorbusier Chair and Rug is from 1969, both pieces reminding us of his singing line quality. And this large print of A Closer Grand Canyonreveals that unknowable Hockney charm, the kind that fills the room.

Pablo Picasso similarly has an indescribable charm, and was also one who shifted stylistically as a matter of course— whether he was scribbling text, inscribing large arabesques or honing impassioned subtleties, Picasso’s marks and forms, humor and personality are simply unparalleled, his unique timbre a diamond in the rough. Congress For Peace - Issy-les-Moulineaux is a very rare stone lithograph poster, printed by Mourlot in 1962 and published by Le Mouvement de la Paix in Paris.Cote D'Azur is an original edition 1962 stone litho by Picasso, a fourteen-color collaboration with master printer Henri Deschamps, an unusual and formidable feat of lithography prowess as each color requires its own stone plate. And Picasso fans everywhere will respond to Guernica, its composition, subject matter and tone earth-moving in nature.

Alexander Calder showed the world how to rethink the art of motion, his kinetic sculptures dazzling the eyes of all who encounter them. Even his prints are full of movement and energy, a testament to his undying enthrallment with the magic of the natural world and its unfolding. 1971 stone lithograph Derriere le Miroir No. 156 is an almost automatic rendering of some dream state, the crashing together of an enamored artist’s mind and a symphony of organic activity. And Spirales, a 1974 stone litho also out of the DLM publication offers similar gestures, perhaps swallows hunting insects in the sinking sunlight.

One can never go wrong with Marc Chagall’s flying figures, his night visions perpetually following the frequency of love. His words are synonymous with this insight, as heard in quotes like “In our life there is a single color, as on an artist palette which provides the meaning of life and art. It is the color of love;” and “If I create from the heart, nearly everything works; if from the head, almost nothing.” Derriere Le Miroir no. 27-28 Cover features some uncharacteristically dark colors, striking a trance-like mood, and the euphoria of love carries through The Song of Songs with details like the low placement of the moon and the mysterious presence of the other figures, some even upside down— delightful.

Joan Miró’s abstract brilliance built an empire of abstract expressionist work, with innumerable pieces all glittering with the same mystique. La Danse de Feu, a 1963 DLM stone litho, is a gorgeous experiment with materials suggesting elements of both water and fire, playfulness and intensity, and Gravure sur Bois 8 is a thrilling 1958 woodblock print from a series done with French poetry, printed on Arches wove paper and with an image and text on both sides. Miró’s shapes and unique use of overlays with the materials allow this latter work in particular to softly pull the viewer around, activating different parts of our minds, bodies and emotions— something for which the best abstract art can show great capacity, and with which Miró especially displays an unequalled affinity.

And if you ever come across a work you are interested in that we no longer carry, let us know anyways as we have been known to be good print hunters, and we have a Wishlist feature that can send you an email if we get your request back in the shop.