Round Mountain 1986 20x24
Michael Dvortcsak
Original Painting : Oil on Canvas on Stretcher Bars
Size : 20x24 in | 51x61 cm
- 🔥Oil on Canvas - Inquire $5,900
Year1986
Hand SignedOn Verso in Charcoal
Condition Excellent
Not FramedCanvas on Stretcher Bars
Purchased fromArtist 2020
Story / Additional InfoDuring the late 90s and early 2000s, Dvortcsak's evolved to a series of Stone paintings where the artist painted mysterious rocks and rock formations perched in the middle of ocean spaces, a vast landscape, or against the darkness of light. In doing so, Dvortcsak pushes at at rational logic and pulls us into their vaguely surreal scenery.
Certificate of AuthenticityArt Brokerage
Additional InformationMotivated
LID168096
Michael Dvortcsak - United States
Art Brokerage: Michael Dvortcsak American Artist: Michael "Mickey" Dvortcsak's career began in the 60s as a distinguished student under Howard Warshaw and Rico Lebrun at UCSB, where he earned his MFA, and eventually taught. By the mid-70s he had achieved enough critical success in the artworld to give up teaching to focus full time on his work, but he never stopped being a mentor to young, ambitious artists and was an important influence on many of the area's most well-known contemporary artists. During his five decade career, Dvortcsak was constantly pushing himself, exploring distinct aesthetics and experimenting with new materials, but always with a deep foundation in classical technique and theory. He had his first solo museum exhibition at the Santa Barbara Museum of Art in 1967, and he continued to exhibit in many of the area's most important galleries and museums for the rest of his life. By the 1980s, his work was being shown in galleries all over the country and was featured in a number of national museums including the San Francisco Museum of Art, Pennsylvania Academy of Art, and the Baltimore Museum of Art. Today Dvortcsak's work can be found in the permanent collections of the Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), Los Angeles; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; San Diego Museum of Art, Santa Barbara Museum of Art; Newport Harbor Art Museum; Orange County Museum of Art; and the Huntington Hartford Foundation, New York. Listings wanted.