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Harnisch and Company

'72 US Oil Painting Orange Tan & Grey Windows Michael Vinson Clark (B 1946)(PaR)

'72 US Oil Painting Orange Tan & Grey Windows Michael Vinson Clark (B 1946)(PaR)

Regular price $2,479.00 USD
Regular price $0.00 USD Sale price $2,479.00 USD
Sale Sold out

Up for sale from a recent estate in Honolulu Hawaii, this 1972 US modernist oil on canvas architectural painting that is titled "Orange Tan & Grey" depicting a facade with windows and was created by the artist Michael Vinson Clark aka Clark V. Fox (born 1946). The condition is described above for more information please check the photos. Free local pick up possible!!!


Measurements:

Image 24 inches x 24 inches

Frame 25 inches x 25 inches


More about the artist:

Michael Vinson Clark (name changed to Clark V. Fox) [American, born 1946]


Michael Vinson Clark now makes art under the name Clark V. Fox, a name he adopted to honor his Powhatan and Cherokee ancestry and to differentiate himself from an artist with the same name. Clark was raised in Texas and moved to Washington, D.C., during the 1960s. He studied with Japanese artist Unichi Hiratsuka (1895-1997) in the early 1960s and briefly attended the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York. In Washington, he painted on projects with Gene Davis (1920-1985) and Thomas Downing (1928-1985), and later worked at the Corcoran Gallery of Art. Clark helped found the Museum of Contemporary Art in Washington and remained at its center for 14 years. Clark was introduced to the Vogels by Richard Tuttle at a Whitney Biennial in the early 1970s. He and Herb became good friends, attending gallery openings and art history lectures at The Frick Collection.


In the 1970s, Clark produced a series of paintings, drawings, and prints of windows. In some the architectural reference is obvious, while others appear completely abstract on first glance. The flat color and geometric quality of these paintings link them to Minimalism and Hard-Edge abstraction, while the presence of subject matter and specificity of location place them within the realm of representational art. In a review of the 1977 Corcoran Biennial in Art News, Benjamin Forgey described the effect of Clark's window paintings: "you got the feeling he was punning Mondrian and other geometricians even as he showed them respect." Influenced by Pop Art, Clark's more recent work appropriates corporate and political icons to comment on the effects of capitalist culture.
Heather Campbell Coyle, Delaware Art Museum, January 2010


Bibliography:
Clark V. Fox, curated by Mary Heilmann, with essay by Emily Warner. New York: Cue Art Foundation, 2009.
Forgey, Benjamin. "The Corcoran Biennial: A Generational Split." Art News 76 (May 1977), 106-114.
Michael Clark, with an interview by Gene Baro. Syracuse, New York: Everson Museum of Art, 1974.
The Vogel 50x50 site brings together 2,500 contemporary artworks that were distributed throughout the nation as part of The Dorothy and Herbert Vogel Collection: Fifty Works for Fifty States gift. Currently, 2,196 of 2,500 artworks have been published on the site, and more are continuously added.

Condition: 

The painting is in good pre-owned condition, the back is inscribed with the artists signature and the title, this and the other paintings listed with the client code (PaR) were collected by a archivist of the National Archive in DC over the past 50 years

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