Miscellaneous Holiday Themed Prints By Various Artists
Location: BRG-Fairfield
Item #: 229465
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Signed  by the following artists: 
Bernard Childs -- signed prints  Noel series of miniatures  1964 - 1984 (21 total); (1910-1985)  who was an artist based in Paris and New York. Primarily a painter and printmaker  Childs pioneered the direct engraving of metal plates. Childs' formal interests were line and space  light and color  and the dialogue of contrasting elements. By 1959 he had his first solo museum exhibition  of paintings and prints  at the Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam. Childs was also one of the first post World War II Western artists invited to show in Japan where he had two exhibitions  of paintings and of prints in 1960 and 1961 respectively at the Tokyo Gallery  and received the Museum of Western Art Award at the 1961 Tokyo International Print Biennial. In 1969  a retrospective of his 1960's paintings  prints and engraved acrylic light sculptures was held at the Storm King Art Center in Mountainville  NY. 
Ruth Leaf -- 6 signed prints  holiday series; (1923 – 2015) was an American artist and a pioneer in the discipline of printmaking  specifically etching. Leaf had a long and prolific career; teaching and exhibiting work until her late eighties. Her work is included in the collections of The Library of Congress  New York University  Columbia University  Ohio’s Butler Institute of American Art and Connecticut’s Slater Museum.  
Motoko Tanaka (2)
Eusebio Sempere (2  serigraph prints); (1923 – 10 April 1985) was a Spanish sculptor  painter and graphic artist whose abstract geometric works make him the most representative artist of the Kinetic art movement in Spain and one of Spain's foremost artists. His use of repetition of line and mastery of color to manipulate the way light plays on the surface give depth to his pictorial compositions. His works are in the collections at New York's MoMA and the Fogg Museum at Harvard  among many other museums. 
Helen Siegl (2); (1924-2009) Austrian-born Printmaker Helen Siegl spent most of her life in the U.S.  but her aesthetic creed was forged by her experiences in her home city of Vienna during the traumatic years of Nazi Annexation  World War II  and the post-war Soviet occupation. Her work is included in various collections nationwide  among them the National Gallery and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. 
Agathe Sorel (2); (born 1935  Budapest) is a London-based artist of Hungarian descent  specializing in painting  sculpture  printmaking and livres d’artiste. She was one of the first artists who experimented with making objects and sculptures using print techniques. Her work is among the collections at London’s Tate Gallery and British Museum  Boston’s Museum of Fine Arts  the Art Institute of Chicago  and more. 
Manuel Hernández Mompó (2); (1927 - 1992) Manuel Mompó was one of the most important figures of Spanish contemporary art in the second half of the 20th century.  
Clare Romano (1); (1922–2017) was an internationally known American printmaker and painter with works in New York'sMetropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art  the Smithsonian American Art Museum  Cooper Hewitt  and other major collections.
Arturo Luz (1); (1926 - 2021) was a Filipino visual artist. He was also a known printmaker  sculptor  designer and art administrator. Luz produced art pieces through a disciplined economy of means. His early drawings were described as playful linear works influenced by Paul Klee. His best masterpieces were minimalist  geometric abstracts  alluding to the modernist virtues of competence  order and elegance; and had been further described as evoking universal reality and mirrors an aspiration for an acme of true Asian modernity. A founding member of the modern Neo-realist school in Philippine art  he received the Philippine National Artist Award  the country's highest accolade in the arts  in 1997.
May Janko (1) [(1926 - 2003) born in New York City and studied at Hunter College and the Art Students League. She traveled and studied extensively in Europe. Janko’s primary medium was printmaking. Her work is in the collections of the National Gallery of Art  Washington  D.C.  the Cincinnati Museum of Art  the Philadelphia Museum of Art  the Metropolitan Museum of Art  the Walker Art Collection  and more.]
Amadeo Gabino (1); (1922 - 2004)  son of the sculptor Alfonso Gabino  he was a Spanish painter  sculptor and engraver. Amadeo Gabino began his studies of art at the San Carlos Superior School of Fine Arts in Valencia  he completed them in Rome  Paris  Hamburg and New York. His work is made up of abstract metallic objects and constructivist collages. Gabino received several awards  including: Alfons Roig Award  Valencia  in 1998  National Printing Award  International Ibero-American Biennial  Mexico  in 1980  National Industrial Design Award  Valencia  in 1980  Grand Prize in the X Milan Triennial  in 1954 and the Grand Prize  Ibero-American Biennial  Havana  Cuba  in 1953."


























































