Thursday, October 9, 2008

Layne Jackson

Cuban Taxi, gouache on board, 16 in x 20 in


Wednesday, October 8, 2008

Andy Warhol


Boxing Gloves, c. 1954, ink on Strathmore paper,
15.2 in x 9.2 in

Viva el trigésimoprimer aniversario!




Thomas Rowlandson (1756-1827)

A Boxing Match, watercolour and ink on paper, 7.3 in x 10. 6 in

Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Lance Anderson

The Reporter, oil on canvas, 16 in x 20 in


http://www.oilpaintingsbylance.com/


John Bawtree

Prado 264, oil on board, 14 im x 16 in

Monday, October 6, 2008

Steve Wilson

King of Cuba, collage and gouache on canvas on wood, ("medium sized")

http://stevewilson.subpacket.com/

Frances Norris Streit (American, early 20th c.)

Portrait of a Boxer, oil on canvas, 28.5 in x 23.5 in

Frances Norris Streit was born in Indianapolis, IN and studied at Herron School of Art. She exhibited at the Carnegie Show, Pittsburgh and won prizes at the Hoosier Salon. She lived and is recognized in NY. Noted portraitist of IN Governor George Craig, 1955.

Sunday, October 5, 2008

Диденко Рафаил Андреевич. Rafail Andréevich Didenko

Портрет Лены Седовой (Portrait of Lena Sedova), 1968, oil on canvas, 80 cm x 60 cm


Nora Cerviño



http://artdecoration.blogspot.com/

Saturday, October 4, 2008

Rick Timmons

General S. Patton, 28 in x 22 in


http://www.locogringostudios.com/




George S. Patton
22" x 28"

Christopher Howe

Cuba,2004, ink and gouache on rice paper

http://christopherhowe.com/

Friday, October 3, 2008

Runcie Tatnall

Portrait of a Boxer # 2, oil on canvas, 45 in x 52 in

http://www.runcie.com/portraits.htm
Portrait of a Boxer #2, oil on canvas, size: 45" X 62”



Portrait of a Boxer #2, oil on canvas, size: 45" X 62”
Portrait of a Boxer #2, oil on canvas, size: 45" X 62”
Portrait of a Boxer #2, oil on canvas, size: 45" X 62”

Military Portraits

Marsden Hartley (American, 1877–1943),
Portrait of a German Officer, 1914, oil on canvas;
68 1/4 in x 41 3/8 in. (173.4 x 105.1 cm)

E. Luchenko (Russian), War Veteran, 1967, oil on canvas,
14 in x 23 in (35 cm x 58 cm)

Thursday, October 2, 2008

Alonso Mateo Today In Arizona

Evangelina, 1992, acrylic on canvas, 58.5 in x 90 in


The Queen Engagement Ring, 1994, acrylic on canvas, 56 in x 82.5 in

Countly, countingwishfully, Count Alonso Mateo steps on a Bentley tonight. His solo show Illusion & Fantasy opens tonight at Bentley Gallery, in Scottsdale, Arizona, a Southwestern state with a deep and long rooting relationship with contemporary Cuban art. The place where Pedro Alvarez died, tracing since a sentimental and mysterious link with Cuban painters, mostly those from the eighties.

Mateo gets into the landscape of American art after fifteen years of Aztec marauding, begun in the late Eighties and early Nineties when most of his generation moved out to Mexico in a massive exodus, later derived in a disperse diaspora. His three year stay in Miami plunged him again into the contact with the core of the old guard, his old acquaintances and gave him new energy and motives. His work, American since birth, branded by the whiplash of Pop art from magazines and biennales, solidifies its Northern, Western quality in the U.S. The proximity of the American hardware brings better material winds and his Rococo caprices get the official support from The Home Depot.

Since months ago, the imminent approach of Arizona desert and its unending cosmic sky seemed to sow a kind of Roswell spirit, a kind of a mood from Area 51 in the studio at NE 51st street in Miami, where these visions have been concocted. Extraterritorial artifacts, aliens, precious crafts have sneaked in the afternoons, with the running and noisy kids from the Children's Museum Charter School, who land en masse every day by four o'clock.

And smoking ghosts appeared, making the visitor, the neighbor to see from high the living paintings, constantly changing by themselves, from one afternoon to another. The eye of the beholder flies, looking to the wall and soaring in orbit, in constant altitude and speed. Below, stuck between, glides a shining jewel, making the Earth (the farthest plane) a blurred and forgotten background.

A single mom reports sightings of unidentified identity perpetuation objects, frivolously anonymous, suspended still, in couples, in the air.

Some eyewitness dares to testify they saw Obbatalá, (the Santeria orisha, whose festivity was celebrated just a week ago) getting into Mateo's studio an afternoon this summer, revolving all the process and bringing good Mexican white acrylic. She made the artist to paint for her three triplet, soothing, autonomous, small jewels. That's why today in Scottsdale Nuestra Señora de las Mercedes, Our Lady of Mercy, recovers a space in the old region of the missions, of the Spanish Conquest. She makes the Count to put a Mercedes at Bentley.

He takes out his gold again, his golden chairs, so royal and deformed. He takes out a blind man cane from a piano bench and puts Phoenix's people to play the old Duchamp's surrealist game, that always entertains, that never ends. He uses again proven resources: cleanliness, craft, wise and witchy philosophy about simplicity and beauty, good taste and elegance. Let's see what happens next.

Poster Monet-Mondrian (Clash of the Colours)

Wednesday, October 1, 2008

William Henry Clapp (1879-1954)

Casa Villa, 1915, oil on panel, 9.75 in x 13,5 in


Clapp, who began his artistic studies in Montreal with William Brymner, moved to Paris 1904, where he exhibited at the Salon d'Automne alongside Pierre Bonnard and Pierre-Auguste Renoir. While he embraced Impressionism and Pointillism in Paris, his style was highly criticized back in Montreal, when he exhibited there. He moved to Cuba in 1915.
Casa Villa was most likely painted on his father's pineapple plantation there on the Isle of Pines.


Octavio Guinart

The Incredible Story of the Güira de Macurije's Cows, 2003, oil on canvas, 36 in x 48 in


http://www.guinartgallery.com/

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Lili Bernard

El Mambí en la Manigua: My Abuelo José Rodriguez Figueroa,
2007, oil on canvas, 30 in x 48 in

http://www.lilibernard.com/Pages/Mambi.html

Poster Rodin-Picasso (Battle of the Heavyweights)

Monday, September 29, 2008

Alicia Oliveras

Boxeador, 2007, acrílico sobre lienzo, 50 cm x 50 cm

Samantha Wendell

Riddick Bowe, date unknown, oil on canvas, 48 in x 36 in


http://www.sportart.net/swport.html

Sunday, September 28, 2008

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Julio Ferrer

SDD760, 2005, oil on canvas, 28 in x 39 in