El Presidente Posted February 16, 2022 Author Posted February 16, 2022 I think the old Cigar tins qualify as "Cigar art" today. Gorgeous 3
El Presidente Posted February 28, 2022 Author Posted February 28, 2022 Title: Head Of A Man With Cigar - Medium: Fine Art Reproduction Giclee on Canvas - Image Size: Approximately 20 inches x 12.75 inches - Unframed on Unstretched Canvas - Biography: José Victoriano González-Pérez, better known as Juan Gris, was a Spanish painter born in Madrid who lived and worked in France for most of his active period. Closely connected to the innovative artistic genre Cubism, his works are among the movement's most distinctive. 4
riderpride Posted February 28, 2022 Posted February 28, 2022 13 hours ago, El Presidente said: Title: Head Of A Man With Cigar - Medium: Fine Art Reproduction Giclee on Canvas - Image Size: Approximately 20 inches x 12.75 inches - Unframed on Unstretched Canvas - Biography: José Victoriano González-Pérez, better known as Juan Gris, was a Spanish painter born in Madrid who lived and worked in France for most of his active period. Closely connected to the innovative artistic genre Cubism, his works are among the movement's most distinctive. Interesting. I wonder what the meaning is behind him having two faces. Thoughts from the community? Cheers
Popular Post El Presidente Posted April 1, 2022 Author Popular Post Posted April 1, 2022 Tempted to buy Ken this for his upcoming 70th 4 3
El Presidente Posted June 6, 2022 Author Posted June 6, 2022 SHAW McCUTCHEON (1921-2016) Uncle Sam giving Fidel Castro a cigar. Pen and ink on illustration paper. 18x14½ inches, sheet. Signed "Shaw McCutcheon" in ink, lower left.Political cartoon created on the occasion of the United States’ ban on Cuban cigars, which was included in the trade embargo and signed into law by President John F. Kennedy on February 7th 1962. 3
Popular Post argrovesjd Posted June 9, 2022 Popular Post Posted June 9, 2022 I commissioned Milton to do this painting a few weeks ago. One of a kind. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro 11 1
Popular Post BubbaRay16 Posted August 15, 2022 Popular Post Posted August 15, 2022 Found this hand painted whiskey barrel top on etsy. 11
El Presidente Posted October 3, 2022 Author Posted October 3, 2022 ANTONI CLAVÉ I SANMARTà (Barcelona, 1913 - Saint Tropez, France, 2005). "Roi". 1960. Mixed media on paper. Signed and dated in the lower left corner. Size: 33 x 29 cm; 50 x 52 cm (frame). Between the end of the fifties and the beginning of the seventies, Antoni Clavé developed an imaginative gallery of kings inspired by medieval warriors, Baroque paintings and effigies of playing cards. The present work can be related to different versions of kings with pipes that he produced using collage and mixed techniques, although in this case the figure appears to be smoking a cigar. The schematic profile is resolved with expressive strokes inherited from art brut, but drifting towards a particular informalism. The artist superimposes different chromatisms and sign palimpsests, leaving the rough textures of the cardboard support for the flesh tones. In this coexistence of figurative elements and incipient abstractions, we can already guess his later abandonment of figuration. Antoni Clavé is one of the most important figures in Spanish contemporary art. Trained at the San Jordi School of Fine Arts in Barcelona, in 1936 he took an active part in the Civil War, joining the Republican ranks, which led him to go into exile in France at the end of the war. That same year, 1939, he exhibits the drawings he made on the battlefields. He settled in Paris, where he met Vuillard, Bonnard and Picasso. From this period onwards, Clavé began to develop an oeuvre marked by a different, less classical style. During this period his figures gradually lost their precision and form, giving way to the lines and a personal range of colours and textures that were to become the main features of his works from that time onwards. He was already enjoying great international prestige at the time when he began to be recognised in Spain, after his exhibition at the Sala Gaspar in Barcelona in 1956. In 1952 he made the sets for Charles Vidor's film "Hans Christian Andersen", and was nominated for an Oscar. In 1954 he gave up decorating to devote himself to painting. In the 1960s he painted a tribute to El Greco, and his painting at this time reveals the influences of that master, as well as those of the Baroque painters. Of particular relevance is the theme of the knight with his hand on his chest, a reference that would be repeated in Clavé's future works. This period is characterised by the definitive transition to abstraction. In the 1970s Clavé's work continued to evolve, using various techniques such as collage, and inventing new ones such as "papier froissé", the result of a chance use of aerosol on crumpled paper. In 1978, the Musée National d'Art Moderne in Paris, now the Centre Georges Pompidou, devoted a retrospective to him that made him one of the most prestigious artists of his generation. In the 1980s he dedicated a series of works to Picasso under the title "To Don Pablo". His latest works are characterised by the recreation of textures within abstraction, with a profuse use of papier froissé. He was awarded prizes at the Hallimark in New York in 1948, at the Venice Biennial in 1954 and at the Tokyo International Biennial in 1957. In 1984 the Spanish state recognised his artistic value with the exhibition of more than one hundred of his works in the Spanish pavilion at the Venice Biennale. That same year he was awarded the Gold Medal of the Generalitat de Catalunya. Clavé's work can be found, among many others, in the Bilbao Fine Arts Museum, the Tate Gallery, the Modern Art Museum in Paris and Tokyo, the British Museum and the Reina SofÃa Museum in Madrid. 2
El Presidente Posted October 4, 2022 Author Posted October 4, 2022 Ruby Mazur (American b. 1946), "A Mans Room", 1996, oil on canvas, depicting a surrealist view of a man's room having a cigar, shaving brush, and wine glass surrounded by a sky wallpapered background, signed and dated to the lower left, framed. Note: this work is based on Rene Magritte's "Personal Values" from 1952 2
Digi Posted October 5, 2022 Posted October 5, 2022 The Habano Moderno posters take the cake for me. Absolutely incredible! Full res here: https://share.icloud.com/photos/0071AqQ3b4im4GZm-aw55MdEg 4
Popular Post Frinkiac7 Posted November 4, 2022 Popular Post Posted November 4, 2022 Not really “cigar art” but random things I have around the office. 9
El Presidente Posted December 5, 2022 Author Posted December 5, 2022 Photographer: Helmut Newton (Germany, 1920 - 2004) - best known for his erotically charged highly stylized images, Helmut Newton was one of the most influential fashion photographers of all time. Title: Cigar Industry, Milan Date Of Negative: 1997 Type Of Print: Authentic Vintage Photo Engraving Date Of Print: 2000 3
westg Posted December 6, 2022 Posted December 6, 2022 6 hours ago, El Presidente said: Photographer: Helmut Newton (Germany, 1920 - 2004) - best known for his erotically charged highly stylized images, Helmut Newton was one of the most influential fashion photographers of all time. Title: Cigar Industry, Milan Date Of Negative: 1997 Type Of Print: Authentic Vintage Photo Engraving Date Of Print: 2000 Very good ...would have been a tad better if they swapped girls with the cigar .
El Presidente Posted January 3, 2023 Author Posted January 3, 2023 Glen La Fontaine b.1947 Native Art Pottery Plaque 1
Popular Post El Presidente Posted January 5, 2023 Author Popular Post Posted January 5, 2023 by Steve Kaufmanis a unique hand pulled silkscreen mixed media on canvas and is hand signed by Steve Kaufman. 6
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