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Esther Phillips Asylum Scene Oil Painting, Mid-20th Century

Item Details

Esther Phillips (Pittsburgh/New York, 1902–1983)
Untitled (asylum scene), mid-20th century
Oil painting on paper
Signed to the lower right

Esther Phillips left Pittsburgh in the late 1930s to pursue a bohemian lifestyle in Greenwich Village. A member of the Associated Artists of Pittsburgh, she immersed herself into local artistic circles, and among her artist friends were modernists Milton Weiss (American, 1912-1995) and Franz Kline (American, 1910-1962). Phillips’ work was often executed in watercolors at a quick pace, exhibiting the influence of Fauvism, Cubism, and artists such as Stuart Davis, Arthur Dove, and Georgia O’Keeffe. Frequent subjects include abstracted cityscapes, townscapes, and asylum scenes that feature vibrant colors, simple shapes, and overall flatness. Her work has been exhibited posthumously at multiple galleries such as the Carson Street Gallery, the Pittsburgh Center for the Arts, and the Borelli-Edwards Gallery, among others.

  • Item not examined outside of mounting

Condition

- slight warping to the paper; tear to the upper center at sight edge; slight abrasions to the frame.

Dimensions

30.0" W x 23.0" H x 1.0" D

- measures frame; sight measures 21.75" W x 15.0" H.

Item #

ITMG881858

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