Vintage_Modern_New_York_Constructivism_Abstract_Painting_GEORGE_RODART_1974_01_qcdu

Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974

Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974

Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
This is a visually striking and Avant-garde RARE Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting, Gouache or Pastels on paper, depicting an abstracted and hard-edged geometric image of intersecting shapes, colors, and texture designs. This artwork is by renowned New York Modernist painter, George Rodart b. 1943, and was acquired directly from the contents of the artist’s former art studio in Los Angeles County, California. Signed and dated in the lower right corner: G. Approximately 18 1/4 x 23 1/4 inches including frame. If you like what you see, I encourage you to make an Offer. Please check out my other listings for more wonderful and unique artworks! George Rodart (Born 1943) is active/lives in United States. George Rodart is known for Painting. George Rodart was raised in Pasadena California. He initially studied Physics, and later, after working in the computer industry and on the Apollo Project, enrolled at UCLA to study art. Rodart mentored with Richard Diebenkorn and John McCracken, graduating with a MFA. In Los Angeles he exhibited with the Ulrike Kantor gallery. Rodart was included in the Whitney Biennial in 1975 and again in 1983. In 1984 he received a Guggenheim Fellowship in painting. He moved to NYC, entered a relationship, raised a kid and continued his investigations into the nature of painting. He has been painting continuously for fifty years. Rodart’s body of work is exploratory and investigative, an inquiry into how the culture uses the painted image as a vehicle for expression and as a signifier of the cultural moment. Since 2015 his paintings live at the boundary zone between abstraction and representation, in an area of associations dependent on memory, of personal and cultural experiences. His work embraces the meta world of digital experience, moving towards an Abstract Surrealism. My paintings are a visual record of my perceptions and memories at a moment in the present time. They reflect my memories as both an awareness of history and of my transient experience of the present. In the end what I make are just paintings. They are about color and light, about forms and boundaries, about the illusion of space, about traces of my brush’s movement, about their physicality. They are about my vision, about my memory, about my fleeting recognitions, about my associations, about my impressions of past experiences, about my generation’s beliefs and follies, about my life. All these things are arrested in my painted images with the hope they will resonate new memories for another viewer. GEORGE RODART 49 E. 1st Street New York, NY 10003. Born in Los Angeles, California Lives and works in NYC EDUCATION 1972 University of California at Los Angeles, M. 1969 University of California at Los Angeles, B. AWARDS and GRANTS 1983 Guggenheim Fellowship for Painting 1973 Phalen Award for Painting ONE PERSON EXHIBITIONS 1983 Ulrike Kantor Gallery, Los Angeles, CA 1982 Ulrike Kantor Gallery, Los Angeles, CA 1976 California State University, Los Angeles, CA 1976 Tortue Gallery, Los Angeles, CA BIENNIAL EXHIBITIONS 1983 1983 Biennial, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York 1975 1975 Biennial, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York GROUP EXHIBITIONS 2103 Fountain Art Fair, Hullaballoo Collective, New York, NY 1990 “The Painter and His Occasion” Curated by Alan Jones, Marta Cevera Gallery, NYC, NY. 1988 “Group Exhibition”, John Davis Gallery, New York, NY. 1992 “Art at Friends” S. Bitter-Larkin Gallery, New York, NY. 1986 “13 Americans”, CDS Gallery, New York, NY. 1984 “A Broad Spectrum”, Design Center, Los Angeles, CA. “Group Exhibition”, Ulrike Kantor Gallery, Los Angeles, CA 1983 “Group Exhibition”, Ulrike Kantor Gallery, Los Angeles, CA 1982 “Artists Choose Artists”, Selected by R. Diebenkorn, CDS Gallery, New York, NY “Changing Trends-12 Southern California Artists”, Laguna Beach Museum of Art, CA. 1982 “Summer Show”, Carl Borenstein Gallery, Monica, CA “Art and Survival”, Traction Gallery, Los Angeles, CA “Contemporary Triptychs”, Montgomery Gallery, Claremont College, Claremont, CA L. Times”, University Gallery, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA “Contemporary Drawings: In Search of an Image”, University of California at Santa Barbara “California Painting from the Mickey and Ruth Gribin Collection, California State University at Northridge and University of California at Irvine. “Changing Visions”, Margo Levin Gallery, Los Angeles, CA 1981 “Southern California Drawings”, Joseloff Gallery, University of Hartford, Hartford CT. “Variations: Five Los Angeles Painters”, University of Southern California, Los Angeles “Group Exhibition”, Ulrike Kantor Gallery, Los Angeles, CA “Drawings”, University Art Gallery, California State University, Dominguez Hills, CA 1978 “Group Exhibition”, Meghan Williams Gallery, Los Angeles, CA “A Painting Show”, Mt. San Antionio College, Walnut, CA. 1977 “Six from California”, Dorothy Rosenthal Gallery, Chicago, IL “Contemporary Masters”, Libra Gallery, Claremont College, Claremont, CA “New Spirits”, Santa Monica College Art Gallery, Santa Monica, CA. 1975 “Group Exhibition”, Tortue Gallery, Los Angeles, CA “Four Artists”, Vanguard Gallery, Fullerton, CA 1974 “Three Los Angeles Painters”, Idaho State University, Boise, ID “Group Exhibition”, Ellie Blankfort Gallery, Los Angeles, CA “Group Exhibition”, Susan Rush Gallery, San Francisco, CA 1973 “Painting 1973″, Oakland Museum, Oakland, CA SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY Kienholz, Lyn, L. 271 Henery, Gerrit, “Artists Choose Artists”, Art News, Oct. 162 Mallinson, Constance, “George Rodart at Ulrike Kantor” Art in America, Oct. 1982 p139 Wortz, Melinda, “The Nation”, Art News, May 1982, p. 135 Gleuck, Grace, “In the Arts: Critics Choices”, The New York Times, 2/21/82 Guide, p. 3 Wilson, William, “Reading Between the Lines”, Los Angeles Times, 2/23/82, Part VI, p. 1 Wilson, William, “Galleries”, Los Angeles Times, Feb 26, 1982, Part VI, p. 11 Knight, Christopher, “Cave Paintings for the Atomic Age” Los Angeles Herald Examiner, Feb 28, 1982, p. RAiR Artist: George Rodart. September 8, 2019. Marshall and Winston Gallery. George Rodart’s exhibition of ten large-scale paintings explore the liminal zone between abstraction and representation. Utilizing accident and free association, he combines simple abstract shapes of cut paper to create larger solid forms which become the central characters of his paintings. In 2016, Rodart completed the first hundred paintings from this series. Then he began planning the next stage, extending his vision into much larger works. Following his move to New Mexico, Rodart’s approach became less traditional, more graphic, and closer to a billboard than a painting. George Rodart was exposed to the arts at a young age, and as a boy took painting classes at the Pasadena Art Museum. He initially studied physics and briefly worked in the computer industry and on the Apollo space project. He received his MFA from UCLA where he studied painting with Richard Diebenkorn. Rodart was included in the 1975 and the 1983 Whitney Biennials. In 1983 he won a Guggenheim award for painting. Spotlight: The evolution of a painter – George Rodart. Roswell Artist-in-Residence George Rodart will have his opening and lecture July 19 at 5:30 p. Followed by a reception at 6 p. In the Marshall and Winston Gallery of the Roswell Museum and Art Center, 1011 N. Rodart’s exhibition of 11 large-scale paintings explore the liminal zone between abstraction and representation. It is always difficult to describe a visual artist with the written word, but in the case of Rodart, it is his background that makes it difficult to choose what to let readers know about the RAiR artist and what to let visitors to his exhibit and lecture learn by themselves. When I visited him in his studio, construction workers were in the midst of doing some repair on his apartment. He said he had adapted to New Mexico by getting up and working on his art at 4 a. And when the heat of summer is at its fiercest, stopping at 2 p. Just as these workers do. Rodart’s studio is in an artistic (dis-)order, with paint lined up in repurposed tubs, paper cutouts laying on a neat pile, canvases lined up and photos of his grandchildren pinned on the wall. He doesn’t sit still, though he is a septuagenarian, he looks decades younger. Only when he finished hanging three of his huge canvases on the wall, he sits down, “Now it looks like an artist lives here, ” he said. I have a funny story. I was showing my work at his 98th birthday party and so he sent me an invitation. Rodart grew up in the midst of the golden age of abstract impressionists and pop art, which would form his future and put in the seed to continuously reinventing himself while staying true to his art. Talking to the artist, it is obvious that he is very open about his passion, life and his artistic media. His ability to share, Rodart said, comes from his family and background, which has a direct connection to New Mexico, though he has lived most of his life in California and New York City. “My father is the son of a musician, they lived just outside of Mexico City, which I have never seen and I probably never will, ” he said. But they came to New Mexico, to a little town on the other side of Albuquerque, called Rodarte. There weren’t a lot of Rodartes in the western hemisphere. My grandfather was Spanish and I have Basque roots. At one point his family moved to California. I grew up in Pasadena, California, in a middle-class neighborhood. We were the first Latinos on the block. I didn’t understand anything about races when I was a boy. My mother sang opera, I studied music. My mother came from Italy when she was only four. There were economic difficulties in Italy, so they sent the children over. She lived with an Irish uncle of all things. He was in the restaurant business. As it is often in first generation families, Rodart’s family spoke only English at home. Rodart said, when he learned about RAiR and about its involvement in art education for the children in town, it struck a personal note. As a young boy, he said his mother took him to the Pasadena Art Museum, only six blocks away from where he lived, and signed him up for painting lessons at age 10. “Fifty years later, I realized I was being taught by fledgeling abstract impressionists, who worked for the museum, ” Rodart said. Because of this museum, I got my exposure to art. Pasadena also had an art faire every year in which I participated as a teenager, but that exposure I had at the age of 10 laid the foundation. From that point on, I developed a fairly elaborate relationship with the museum; I knew all the ladies who worked in there. I wasn’t a member, but they let me in. So I attended the (Marcel) Duchamp retrospective (1963). I didn’t even know who Duchamp was, I was maybe 20 at the time. Rodart’s father had become an engineer and was guiding his son to get into a scientific field, so he studied engineering as well, working for early computer companies and becoming an information technology expert. “I wasn’t good at the technical training, but I was good at drawing, ” Rodart said. I worked for a couple of smaller companies. One of them had me working on a lunar project – I designed a little part that was part of the pack of the man who walked on the moon. So, I had all this technological training and then basically kind of decided,’enough. He was accepted at the University of California Los Angeles where he got his Bachelor of Fine Arts degree and then his Master of Fine Arts. At that time, nobody taught marketing or any business aspects connected to the arts, so he started a group to help each other. A lot of us lived in Venice, California at the time. So, we had this little group. We continued the things we did at school. We shared credits of our work; we taught each other how to create a resume and slides. I worked as a carpenter in’75, I was having a hard time to get anybody to pay attention to my work. Rodart moved to New York City. It was rough in’75, but not by’83, unless if you went out to the Bronx. The first time I went to New York City, I stayed with a friend on the floor, typical kind of stuff you did when you were young. We would be walking to East Village and turned around to walk back, it was real creepy. It was still burned out in a lot of places. “I did the art thing for a while, the relocation from California to New York (City) was more difficult than I thought it would be, ” Rodart said. It takes a long time to get used to a new city. The second thing was, I was trying to raise a family, I was into being a responsible father. Rodart withdrew from the exhibition scene, though he continued making art. The majority of art he was creating was investigative and exploring the foundations of painting. While not being active in the art world because of his family, Rodart joined group exhibitions all over the country, including the 1977 Six from California exhibit at the Dorothy Rosenthal Gallery in Chicago, Illinois; in 1981 Southern California Drawings at the Joseloff Gallery, University of Hartford in Hartford, Connecticut; 1982 became a very active year and in 1983, Rodart received the sought-after Guggenheim Fellowship for Painting. From here on, a stable art career kept him in the city. Fast forward to 2015 when a health scare forced Rodart to address his mortality. While other successful artists see their lifetime of work completed at 70, Rodart looked at his work and started to reinvent himself anew. He wanted to reach higher, he said, to start a new style, not to repeat outdated art that no longer had a connection to its purpose. “I imagined myself in this big control room, identifying all this stuff around me, ” Rodart said. I got to thinking, how do we do this? How do we recognize stuff? How do we see things. Rodart became fascinated with the progression of artificial intelligence that shows how the learning process functions. He was also fascinated with cultural aspects on how people literally see art. In 2016, Rodart completed the first 100 paintings from this series. Then he began planning the next stage. Rodart’s style changed from him finding inspiration and finding objects and figures in painting, to using cut-out forms that he arranges and re-arranges until recognition, adding to this, he switched in Roswell from oil paint to acrylics, experimenting during his time as RAiR with different structures. “This would not work with oil, ” he said. Following his move to New Mexico, Rodart’s approach became less traditional, more graphic and closer to a billboard than a painting. This is due to the space he has at the RAiR compound. “This is the biggest and nicest studio I ever had, ” he said. While the paintings he had started in New York City were on a smaller scale, he started creating large collages on canvas that he himself stretched and primed, adding then the cut-outs until he recognizes an object or figure before painting. The results are 11 large pieces of art for the upcoming exhibit. “I didn’t really understand at the beginning what was happening, ” Rodart said. If I think about painting, I think all painting is abstract. Because what you are doing is taking something from the outside world and codifying it on a surface. A photo realist has a high degree of informational content. He makes it conform to a photo. It takes something like Picasso’s “Weeping Woman” painting (which, instead of depicting the Spanish Civil War directly, shows one person suffering). It is one of the most extraordinary paintings ever painted in my opinion. When you look at the painting and don’t see a specific person, but you get this incredible angst, this incredible sadness that comes from the intensity of the image. In-between representation and abstraction, it’s all abstraction, but it is about the degrees of correspondence about the thing you are thinking about on the outside. A photographic image is what we think we see, but we don’t. We know there are other things, like the back (of a person or object). I don’t know exactly, you fill in the image. You don’t worry most of the time, you don’t need to. “The degree of correspondence varies all along, and for me, there is a place in the middle, ” Rodart said. If you find something literal, I do that, but that is something that just happens, I let the work happen. These things are very concrete. These subjective views fascinate Rodart and where those views come from, it can be cultural or come from life experience. Rodart, however, does want the onlooker to find their own view of his art, that’s why he rarely gives his work titles, but rather numbers to identify and to catalogue. Painting has a long history and my recent interest has to do with what I discovered about how we attribute meaning to things, how we attribute recognition, and I use the word’association’ a lot when I talk about these things. I make something until I have some kind of association with it, it kind of looks like a figure. I have a lot of things where I play around with some shape. The public has until Sept. 8 to see Rodart’s exhibit. He hopes and wishes to remain in Roswell, feeling an affinity with the open landscape, which is so different to the skyscrapers of New York City. His staying, however, will depend on the success of his plans to bring more attention to Roswell’s art scene and its possibilities. “The thing is, they should never underestimate the importance of having the two museums, the miniature museum and the music events, ” Rodart said. Those cultural things are a huge draw to relocating businesses. It’s pretty extraordinary and a pretty extraordinary place.
Vintage Modern New York Constructivism Abstract Painting GEORGE RODART 1974
WILLIAM_McKINLEY_INFAMOUS_L_A_SHERIFF_John_Cline_Appointment_1899_Signed_01_fi

WILLIAM McKINLEY INFAMOUS L. A SHERIFF John Cline Appointment 1899 Signed

WILLIAM McKINLEY INFAMOUS L. A SHERIFF John Cline Appointment 1899 Signed
WILLIAM McKINLEY INFAMOUS L. A SHERIFF John Cline Appointment 1899 Signed
WILLIAM McKINLEY INFAMOUS L. A SHERIFF John Cline Appointment 1899 Signed
WILLIAM McKINLEY INFAMOUS L. A SHERIFF John Cline Appointment 1899 Signed
WILLIAM McKINLEY INFAMOUS L. A SHERIFF John Cline Appointment 1899 Signed
WILLIAM McKINLEY INFAMOUS L. A SHERIFF John Cline Appointment 1899 Signed
WILLIAM McKINLEY INFAMOUS L. A SHERIFF John Cline Appointment 1899 Signed
WILLIAM McKINLEY INFAMOUS L. A SHERIFF John Cline Appointment 1899 Signed
WILLIAM McKINLEY INFAMOUS L. A SHERIFF John Cline Appointment 1899 Signed
WILLIAM McKINLEY INFAMOUS L. A SHERIFF John Cline Appointment 1899 Signed
WILLIAM McKINLEY INFAMOUS L. A SHERIFF John Cline Appointment 1899 Signed

WILLIAM McKINLEY INFAMOUS L. A SHERIFF John Cline Appointment 1899 Signed
Antique wood frame measuring 24 x 19. This is an authentic, original Civil Appointment signed document by President William McKinley. The autograph of McKinley is clear and legible, making it a great addition to any political or historical memorabilia collection. The paper has an embossed / raised seal. Sheriff Cline was forcibly removed from office after refusing to step down despite numerous allegations of corruption and court rulings against him. His custom built mansion erected in 1901 still stands in Los Angeles today as a registered historic landmark. The Cline family was prominent on early Los Angeles politics and their family was one of the first to arrive in California in 1867 on the transcontinental railroad. Additional information of interest. The stamp on the back of the frame where Mr Cline had this framed was the emporium of HC LIGHTENBERG who appears in the Los Angeles business directory from 1892 through 1901.
WILLIAM McKINLEY INFAMOUS L. A SHERIFF John Cline Appointment 1899 Signed
ACSC_Azusa_Los_Angeles_San_Bernardino_highway_sign_California_US_Route_66_21x14_01_nxso

ACSC Azusa Los Angeles San Bernardino highway sign California US Route 66 21×14

ACSC Azusa Los Angeles San Bernardino highway sign California US Route 66 21x14
ACSC Azusa Los Angeles San Bernardino highway sign California US Route 66 21x14

ACSC Azusa Los Angeles San Bernardino highway sign California US Route 66 21x14
To maximize the chances your package will arrive before Christmas, please order BEFORE November 24. Azusa and Los Angeles guide sign. Up for sale today is this Azusa, Los Angeles, Claremont, San Bernardino guide sign. Made to the exact standards as used from 1929 to 1934 by the Auto Club of Southern California. This guide sign was posted in Glendora, at the junction of Foothill Boulevard (US highway 66) and Glendora Boulevard, as seen in the original image. Please see my other auctions for the cross-road sign, pointing to Glendora and Covina. The original of this guide sign, complete with the logo of the Automobile Club of Southern California, would cost many thousands of dollars – if it even survives! Only historic photos of it are known. This is a faithful remake to just over one-half the correct size in each dimension: 21 x 14 inches instead of 36 x 24. It is manufactured on heavy steel with the correct layout, fonts and colors. It weighs about 7 pounds, 8 ounces. It is a high quality, heavy steel sign. Accept no imitations that may be one-third this price, but are one-tenth the quality. No cheap tin to be found here, with the wrong fonts, layouts, size, shape, or any other manner of embarrassing imperfection. This one will make even the most discerning collector stick their nose into the sign, as it looks that good from that close! Would you like a number not seen here? Or perhaps a different style? I can of course make these signs with any city name of your choice, and not just this style, but older and newer ones, and even the classic mileage, direction, and route shield signs from the era. Anything you would like, made with unsurpassed quality right here in the good old US of A.
ACSC Azusa Los Angeles San Bernardino highway sign California US Route 66 21x14
Metro_TAP_Card_Set_of_5_ART_SERIES_Long_Beach_Pasadena_Griffith_Leimert_Pico_01_mwm

Metro TAP Card Set of 5 ART SERIES Long Beach, Pasadena, Griffith, Leimert, Pico

Metro TAP Card Set of 5 ART SERIES Long Beach, Pasadena, Griffith, Leimert, Pico

Metro TAP Card Set of 5 ART SERIES Long Beach, Pasadena, Griffith, Leimert, Pico
Set of 5 limited edition “Art on TAP” cards featuring artworks commissioned by Los Angeles Metro. Artworks are part of an award-winning series by local artists that illustrate the unique places accessible by Metro across L. Griffith Park by Bob Zoell. Long Beach by Christine Nguyen. Pico Rivera by Ramon Ramirez. Pasadena by Walter Askin. Leimert Park by Sam Pace. Cards are active and can be loaded with fare.
Metro TAP Card Set of 5 ART SERIES Long Beach, Pasadena, Griffith, Leimert, Pico
WALTER_LEISTIKOW_BAUMGRUPPE_GROVE_OF_TREES_drypoint_c_1896_01_cx

WALTER LEISTIKOW,’BAUMGRUPPE (GROVE OF TREES)’, drypoint, c. 1896

WALTER LEISTIKOW,'BAUMGRUPPE (GROVE OF TREES)', drypoint, c. 1896
WALTER LEISTIKOW,'BAUMGRUPPE (GROVE OF TREES)', drypoint, c. 1896
WALTER LEISTIKOW,'BAUMGRUPPE (GROVE OF TREES)', drypoint, c. 1896

WALTER LEISTIKOW,'BAUMGRUPPE (GROVE OF TREES)', drypoint, c. 1896
Walter Leistikow,’Baumgruppe (Grove of Trees)’, drypoint, c. A superb, richly-inked impression, on buff wove paper, with full margins (1 5/8 to 5 1/4 inches) in excellent condition. Published in’Pan II, no. 1 (1896)’, the leading German magazine of the period devoted to art and literature. Image size 4 1/2 x 6 7/8 inches; sheet size 13 3/4 x 10 1/2 inches. Reproduced:’German Expressionist Prints and Drawings, The Robert Gore Rifkind Center for German Expressionist Studies’, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Prestel, 1989, p. An impression of this print is in the permanent collection of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. The Pan Art Association was established in Berlin, Germany in the spring of 1894 for the purpose of publishing. A richly illustrated international magazine, which featured contemporary art, literature and poetry. Pan was the first German journal to commission original works of art. The editions of approximately 1100 per issue, used fine papers and were produced to the highest printmaking standards.
WALTER LEISTIKOW,'BAUMGRUPPE (GROVE OF TREES)', drypoint, c. 1896
Original_Orange_Crate_Label_Indian_Hill_Pomona_California_C1915_Sunburst_Wear_01_oz

Original Orange Crate Label Indian Hill Pomona California C1915 Sunburst Wear

Original Orange Crate Label Indian Hill Pomona California C1915 Sunburst Wear
Original Orange Crate Label Indian Hill Pomona California C1915 Sunburst Wear

Original Orange Crate Label Indian Hill Pomona California C1915 Sunburst Wear
Original Orange Crate Label, Indian Hill Brand, Indian Hill Citrus Association, North Pomona, Los Angeles County, California. Early label in very good condition, some very light wear, tiny bit of water staining, not evident from front but see reverse scan of label, as shown.
Original Orange Crate Label Indian Hill Pomona California C1915 Sunburst Wear
Vintage_Original_Los_Angeles_County_Masonite_Biohazard_Sign_Medical_Examiner_01_ohrm

Vintage Original Los Angeles County Masonite Biohazard Sign Medical Examiner

Vintage Original Los Angeles County Masonite Biohazard Sign Medical Examiner
Vintage Original Los Angeles County Masonite Biohazard Sign Medical Examiner
Vintage Original Los Angeles County Masonite Biohazard Sign Medical Examiner
Vintage Original Los Angeles County Masonite Biohazard Sign Medical Examiner
Vintage Original Los Angeles County Masonite Biohazard Sign Medical Examiner
Vintage Original Los Angeles County Masonite Biohazard Sign Medical Examiner
Vintage Original Los Angeles County Masonite Biohazard Sign Medical Examiner
Vintage Original Los Angeles County Masonite Biohazard Sign Medical Examiner
Vintage Original Los Angeles County Masonite Biohazard Sign Medical Examiner
Vintage Original Los Angeles County Masonite Biohazard Sign Medical Examiner

Vintage Original Los Angeles County Masonite Biohazard Sign Medical Examiner
Vintage rare and original 1968-69 Masonite Biohazard sign. This came from the County of Los Angeles Medical Examiners office. I acquired it from a good friend who retired from there after many years as a forensic pathologist. This was at the entrance to his lab before they replaced with new signs in the early 80’s. It measures 18″ x 12″. The back has some discoloring and has a waffled texture. There are a few small age spots on the front where the Masonite has become warped (see pictures). Sign lays flat and doesn’t have any cracks or breaks. If you have any questions, please feel free to ask. Thank you for looking at my item.
Vintage Original Los Angeles County Masonite Biohazard Sign Medical Examiner
1958_ORIGINAL_UCLA_M_A_THESIS_Geology_of_Sunland_Tujunga_SIGNED_by_3_Professors_01_gcoe

1958 ORIGINAL UCLA M. A. THESIS Geology of Sunland Tujunga SIGNED by 3 Professors

1958 ORIGINAL UCLA M. A. THESIS Geology of Sunland Tujunga SIGNED by 3 Professors
1958 ORIGINAL UCLA M. A. THESIS Geology of Sunland Tujunga SIGNED by 3 Professors
1958 ORIGINAL UCLA M. A. THESIS Geology of Sunland Tujunga SIGNED by 3 Professors
1958 ORIGINAL UCLA M. A. THESIS Geology of Sunland Tujunga SIGNED by 3 Professors
1958 ORIGINAL UCLA M. A. THESIS Geology of Sunland Tujunga SIGNED by 3 Professors
1958 ORIGINAL UCLA M. A. THESIS Geology of Sunland Tujunga SIGNED by 3 Professors
1958 ORIGINAL UCLA M. A. THESIS Geology of Sunland Tujunga SIGNED by 3 Professors
1958 ORIGINAL UCLA M. A. THESIS Geology of Sunland Tujunga SIGNED by 3 Professors
1958 ORIGINAL UCLA M. A. THESIS Geology of Sunland Tujunga SIGNED by 3 Professors

1958 ORIGINAL UCLA M. A. THESIS Geology of Sunland Tujunga SIGNED by 3 Professors
THE GEOLOGY OF THE SUNLAND TUJUNGA AREA, LOS ANGELES COUNTY, CALIFORNIA, by Robert Lee Beatie. AN ORIGINAL TYPESCRIPT (typed Carbon Copy) Master of Arts THESIS for an M. In Geology, submitted to the University of California, Los Angeles, 1958. Hardbound thesis with Typed Carbon Copy Pages bound in, 102 pages. There are quite a few maps laid in at the rear, many of them hand drawn by the author as part of his thesis, others as supporting material. Hand Signed by three Professors: Cordell Durrell, John C. Crowell, and Harry P. GOOD condition, the covers are shaky but holding, the pages and maps are lightly toning, otherwise complete, clean, clear and unmarked. A unique 1958 UCLA M.
1958 ORIGINAL UCLA M. A. THESIS Geology of Sunland Tujunga SIGNED by 3 Professors
Vintage_California_Plein_Air_Impressionist_Landscape_Oil_Painting_HROVAT_50s_01_lli

Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s

Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s

Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s
This is a wonderful and well-done Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting on canvas, by Italian – American California Impressionist painter, Felice Hrovat. This work depicts a bucolic landscape scene, with tall trees flanking the edges, a rushing river, and two small dwellings in the distance. Signed: “Felic Hrovat” in the lower right corner. This artwork likely dates to the 1950’s – 1960’s. Approximately 20 3/4 x 26 3/4 inches including frame. Actual artwork is approximately 18 x 24 inches. Very good condition for age, with some light scuffing and edge wear to the original period frame please see photos. Acquired in Los Angeles County, California. If you like what you see, I encourage you to make an Offer. Please check out my other listings for more wonderful and unique artworks! Felice Hrovat is active/lives in California. Felice Hrovat is known for Painting. Felice Hrovat was born in Trieste, Italy. His passion for expressing himself through art, via paint, brushes and canvas started as a teen in his homeland. Then, in his early twenties, he found himself first in Montreal, Canada, and then later in Southern California. It was there, in California that he really worked to establish his skills while also working as an advertisement artist for over thirty years. Throughout the last fifty years he has been inspired to develop a uniquely distinct style and also approach, utilizing both oils and acrylics as his artistic mediums. After 30 years in the advertising industry he took his retirement in 1991. Since then he has actually dedicated the majority of his time and focus upon his art, spending the majority of his time at the easel or in his studio, further developing his art and exploring design, color and composition. In 1993, he began conducting oil paint workshops for aspiring artists as well as fellow experienced professionals that shared his interest and style. His dedication and talent has brought him a number of awards: the People’s Choice Awards, Best of Show Awards from the San Gabriel Art Association and multiple awards in the City of Norco Western Art Show and Sale. He has also done a significant amount of commercial work and commissioned works for private clients.
Vintage California Plein Air Impressionist Landscape Oil Painting, HROVAT 50s