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mannotboy · 8 days
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Amy Sillman,  2020
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mannotboy · 19 days
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mannotboy · 20 days
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Stanley Whitney
 Portrait of a Dream, 1984
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mannotboy · 1 month
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Ulrich Rückriem, Relieve bajo (1981-2019), Porto slate, 6 x 120 x 80 cm.
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mannotboy · 2 months
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Richard Diebenkorn, Untitled (Ocean Park), (synthetic polymer paint, gouache, watercolor, cut-and-pasted paper, and pencil on cut-and-pasted paper), 1977 [MoMA, New York, NY. © the Estate of Richard Diebenkorn]
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mannotboy · 2 months
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Etel Adnan
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mannotboy · 2 months
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by GALERÍA CAYÓN
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mannotboy · 2 months
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John Zurier
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mannotboy · 2 months
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Thornton Willis [USA] (b 1936) ~ ‘a small painting for vered’, 2018. Acrylic on canvas (50.8 x 40.64 cm).
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mannotboy · 2 months
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Frank Bowling
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mannotboy · 3 months
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mannotboy · 3 months
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Amy Sillman (American, b. 1955), “C”, 2007, 114.3 x 99.4 cm
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mannotboy · 5 months
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Barnett Newman, Black Fire I, 1961. 
Oil on canvas. 
114 x 84 in (289.5 x 213.3 cm)
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mannotboy · 6 months
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Stephen Niles, 2015, Whisper.
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mannotboy · 7 months
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Or Else, Stephen Niles, 2018
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mannotboy · 8 months
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by Richard Diebenkorn, 1985
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mannotboy · 8 months
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Josef Frank, textile design Bows, 1960. Linen, cotton.  Via Cooper-Hewitt.
Frank’s interest in pattern design was not unique among Viennese architects; like Josef Hoffmann, Koloman Moser, Otto Czeschka, and Dagobert Peche, he produced several early designs for the Wiener Werkstätte. Unlike other Wiener Werkstätte designers who created a unified design scheme by using the same pattern throughout an interior—on textiles, wallcoverings, and even fashion—Frank preferred an eclectic combination of fabrics in his interiors.
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