Erich Buchholz Serigraph ‘Abstraktion I’ 1921.
(via ebay.at - bauhaus.gallery)
seen from United States

seen from Canada
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seen from United States
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seen from United Kingdom
seen from China
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seen from Malaysia
seen from China
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from China
seen from United Kingdom

seen from United Kingdom
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
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seen from China
Erich Buchholz Serigraph ‘Abstraktion I’ 1921.
(via ebay.at - bauhaus.gallery)
Nuuk 70 x 50 cm
Acryl, Öl, Buchdruckfarbe, Aquarell, & Graphit auf Papier 2021
Here's a non-objective digital peice with neon colors. (I realize now they look sort of like the Bisexual flag. Isn't that interesting? It might just inspire me to make more neon pride flag style pieces.) I think we limit ourselves when it comes to digital artistry. I mean, there's no way to cheat at art, (unless you're stealing art), but we all seem to be convinced that there is. You don't see non-objective digital peices, or abstract digital art, or other non-conventional movements. I think we should do more art like that. Art that exists specifically because you decided to make it. -Maestro
Pietà - Tom Isaacs
Blue - Rebecca Waterstone
(Photography by Cathrine Isaacs)
BLUE curated by Beata Geyer at the Blue Mountains Cultural Centre.
Odili Donald Odita
Passage (2010)
Ad Minoliti. Autumn, 2015.
acrylic + charcoal on canvas
Sandú Darié (1908-1991), Untitled, c. 1953. Plaka on canvas.