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Domenick Capobianco Silkscreens, 2

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Domenick Capobianco Silkscreens, 2

Domenick Capobianco Silkscreens, 2

Domenick Capobianco (American, b. 1928), Two Silkscreens in Colors, comprising: "Weights", artist proof, signed in pencil lower right, inscribed "A.P." lower left, titled, signed, and labeled verso, and "Move-A-Ball-Object", signed in pencil, numbered edition "13/50" lower left, titled and signed verso, both unframed.

Larger: 29.25" H x 21" W. 

Provenance: From the collection of the artist. Note: Domenick Capobianco is a graduate of Washington University at St. Louis, a Rutgers Fellow (1979), and a Guggenheim Fellow (1984/85). He was an educator and mentor at Rutgers University. Capobianco’s work can be found in collections worldwide, including: The Academie des Beaux-Arts, Ljubjana, Slovenia, The Albertina Museum, Vienna, Austria, and The M.V. Nesterov Museum, Ufa, Russia. Alongside his artist wife Elfi Schuselka (Austrian, b. 1940) he frequently exhibited with the famed 55 Mercer Gallery in New York. 

Keywords: Prints, Multiples, Second New York school, Abstract, Abstraction, Surrealist, Geometric, Rainbow, Polychrome, Post-War and Contemporary Art

$850.00
Domenick Capobianco Silkscreens, 2
$850.00

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Domenick Capobianco (American, b. 1928), Two Silkscreens in Colors, comprising: "Weights", artist proof, signed in pencil lower right, inscribed "A.P." lower left, titled, signed, and labeled verso, and "Move-A-Ball-Object", signed in pencil, numbered edition "13/50" lower left, titled and signed verso, both unframed.

Larger: 29.25" H x 21" W. 

Provenance: From the collection of the artist. Note: Domenick Capobianco is a graduate of Washington University at St. Louis, a Rutgers Fellow (1979), and a Guggenheim Fellow (1984/85). He was an educator and mentor at Rutgers University. Capobianco’s work can be found in collections worldwide, including: The Academie des Beaux-Arts, Ljubjana, Slovenia, The Albertina Museum, Vienna, Austria, and The M.V. Nesterov Museum, Ufa, Russia. Alongside his artist wife Elfi Schuselka (Austrian, b. 1940) he frequently exhibited with the famed 55 Mercer Gallery in New York. 

Keywords: Prints, Multiples, Second New York school, Abstract, Abstraction, Surrealist, Geometric, Rainbow, Polychrome, Post-War and Contemporary Art

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