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Grapefruit Moon Gallery

Original Art from the Grand Age of American Illustration

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machine age

A large impressionist pastel by Leon Dolice with an electric view of an illuminated New York City skyline, looking down Madison Avenue towards Chelsea’s Flatiron building. Leon Dolice spent over 60 years painting New York City landscapes, borrowing from the French Impressionists and Claude Monet specifically. He depicted his beloved Manhattan in varying lighting and color combinations, capturing the extreme skyscrapers and machine age industrialism which transformed the New York skyline during the art deco jazz age.

Madison Avenue Skyline

Artist: Leon Dolice

Filed Under: Fine & Decorative Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1940s, american, fine art, Leon Dolice, machine age, new york city, skyline
Added to Gallery: May 29, 2008

A large pastel by Leon Dolice featuring a stark view of an illuminated New York City skyline. Leon Dolice worked for over 60 years painting New York City views borrowing from the French Impressionists and Claude Monet specifically. His countless pastel variations capture his beloved Manhattan in varying lighting and color combinations and pastel configurations. The work highlights the extreme skyscraper forms and machine age industrialism which transformed the New York skyline during the art deco jazz age. A fresh estate find from the Collection of The Mayo Clinic in Rochester Minnesota.

New York City Skyline

Artist: Leon Dolice

Filed Under: Fine & Decorative Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1940s, american, art deco, fine art, jazz age, Leon Dolice, machine age, new york city, skyline
Added to Gallery: May 10, 2008

A whimsical and dazzling watercolor by Heinrich Kley titled “Siche Rude Seiten;” loosely translated, “Our Unrefined Side”. THe splendid cast of characters captures the essence of this fondly remembered avant-garde, Jugendstil, German Expressionist artist. This is a rare full color example of the artist’s work, most surviving pieces by Kley are pen & ink drawings. Kley, whose work first appeared in “Die Jugend” in 1908 caught the eye of Walt Disney in 1937 and Kley inspired much of the animation of “Fantasia”. This evocative painting is rich in humor, technique and imagery.

Our Unrefined Side

Artist: Heinrich Kley

Filed Under: Illustration & Advertising Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1910s, erotic, fine art, german, german expressionism, Heinrich Kley, industrial age, Jugendstil, machine age, original illustration art, The Golden Gallery
Added to Gallery: March 3, 2008

A technically dazzling pen & ink drawing by Heinrich Kley titled “Electrodämonen,” translated “Electric Demons.” A brooding and troubling satire on the machine age and ongoing industrialization. This captures Kley’s technical brilliance and foreshadows the later science fiction pulp drawings of Virgil Finlay. Kley, whose work first appeared in Die Jugend in 1908 caught the eye of Walt Disney in 1937 and Kley inspired much of the animation of Fantasia. This drawing appears as a full page plate in The Drawings of Heinrich Kley.

Electric Demons

Artist: Heinrich Kley

Filed Under: Illustration & Advertising Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1920s, erotic, german, german expressionism, Heinrich Kley, industrial age, Jugendstil, machine age, robot, satirical, science fiction, vienna secessionist
Added to Gallery: March 3, 2008

Grapefruit Moon Gallery is proud to offer several scarce original paintings from the American Illustrator Charles Bosseron Chambers, including this large, dazzling, and spiritually evocative work titled Guardian Angel and Boy. Compositionally, this is a complex, stark, and questioning work. Thematically, the young boy–holding a model airplane–represents the machine age and ongoing industrialization. The angel is shown in a soft focused diffused and ethereal otherwordly world, while the boy is almost photo-realist in appearance. Their interaction calls into question the relationship between modernity and spirituality. Oil is titled on verso and framed in a wonderful carved gold gesso frame.

The Guardian

Artist: Charles Bosseron Chambers

Filed Under: Illustration & Advertising Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1920s, american, angel, charles bosseron chambers, child, christian, illustration, machine age, original calendar art, religious, spiritual
Added to Gallery: May 13, 2007

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