On
Saturday, Sept 28 at 8 p.m., Martin Lawrence Galleries at The Forum Shops at
Caesars will once again present a live auction spanning over 1,000 available
works valued at more than $24 million retail.
Ranging
from world class artists to limited edition works by acclaimed contemporary
artists, The Martin Lawrence Galleries Fall Art Auction is where new collectors
embark and where seasoned collectors capitalize. View the full release
here.
Through
the auction process, bidding often opens at between 30% – 70% off retail
pricing. Request an auction catalogue or reserve your space at the live auction
today – please call 702.991.5990.
Presenting
5 Hot Auction Items...
Andy
Warhol Shoes #254, hand-signed silkscreen with diamond dust, 40 x 59.5 inches.
Andy
Warhol was and will always be known as "The Prince of Pop" because of
his influential art. He is the artist who embraced popular culture as we know
it. An early adopter of the silk screen printmaking process as a technique for
creating paintings, Warhol's earliest silkscreening process involved hand-drawn
images and quickly progressed to the use of photographically derived
silkscreening in paintings.
Liudmila
Kondakova, Rome, hand-pulled serigraph on canvas, 24 × 24 inches.
Kondakova’s
meticulous attention to every detail in her works attributes to her style of
Romantic Realism, allowing viewers to experience the romantic view as if in
Rome themselves. The beauty and melancholy of aged buildings synthesize a
modern-day metropolis with an ancient culture and society that is signature to
her style.
Mark
Kostabi, Didn't We Have a Ball?,
Oil on
canvas, 11.88 x 11.88 inches.
In 1984,
Kostabi emerged as a leading figure in the now legendary East Village art scene
where he cultivated a provocative media persona by publishing self-interviews
reflecting on the commodification of contemporary art. By 1987, his work was
widely exhibited in New York galleries as well as prominently throughout the
United States, Japan, Germany and Australia.
Pablo Picasso, Portrait de Jacqueline de Face II (B.1063)
Hand-signed
linocut, 25 x 21 inches.
Picasso’s
linocut prints stand out as some of the greatest color prints of the 20th
century. He was drawn to the technique's ability to create flat surfaces from
which either textured areas or even tones could be printed; also, it could be
easily carved allowing both freedom and perfection of cut. As seen in the
portrait above, Picasso's linocuts were constructed withpowerful solidarity of
tones - working, cutting, and printing from the boldest forms of the image down
to the absolute finest.
Robert
Deyber, Corn Dog II, acrylic on canvas, 24 x 24 inches.
American
surrealist painter, Robert Deyber, is one of the best-kept secrets in the
contemporary art world. This work is an example of Deyber’s playfulness with
words and his uncanny ability to reinterpret past and present euphemisms,
idioms and clichés with a sophisticated artistic spin. His works relates to
other surrealist icons such as Salvador Dalí and René Magritte, and he appeals
to audiences of all ages.
702-991-5990




No comments:
Post a Comment