SOLD – Salsa by Leila Ullmann

IMG_20140925_182512883

SOLD
Salsa
by Leila Ullmann
Original Oil on Canvas 

Size 23″ x 31″ Approx

Brazilian, born in Rio de Janeiro, formed an Integrated Schools Speech by Estacio de Sa, From a young age I dedicated to perform various forms of artistic expression, but only after retirement did I decide to devote myself entirely to art. SOLO EXHIBITIONS Seixas Cultural Center – June 2007 – RJ; German Alley – October and November/2007 – Barra da Tijuca -RJ; Gallery of Art and Science of Copacabana – Dec / January 2009 Exhibitions Abroad: Anuual 26th of October Gallery Philadelphia International -October/2011 – 6353 Greene Street, Philadelphia, PA 19144 -USA;
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SOLD – Six Mask by Frank Frazier

frankmask1

SOLD
Six Mask
by Frank Frazier
Original – 2010

Mixed Media with Collage on Cardboard
Size 6″ x 10″ Approx

Frank Frazier began his work as a fine artist early, at the age of seven. He was creating paintings in his family’s Harlem, New York City home. A husband and father of five, he recalls growing up, “we were not poor, but my family was a little different.” At the age of 15, his family moved to downtown New York City, which precipitated his “getting into a lot of trouble” as a youngster. A move to Queens, New York, brought with it a stint at a boys’ institution in upstate New York, but it also marked the point where Frazier turned his life around. While at the school, he was responsible for creating art for the “different bunks.” Teachers noticed his talent and later as a Sergeant in the Army during Vietnam, officers gave him the responsibility of painting art and shirts for the platoons. Frazier’s designs included a mixture of different scenes which he completed for free; he and his fellow soldiers weren’t thinking about money when they did their work. Amazingly, after his stint in the service, “I recall my family throwing lots of my art away.” Ironically, today it is the love and support of his immediate and “great extended family” that inspires him.

This sculptor, painter, and collagist cites the Creator as his biggest influence. “The Creator inspires me. He puts whatever I need in me. He also admits that he “loves black women and likes to use them in his art.” Frazier also credits Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence, and Elizabeth Cattlett as his biggest artistic inspirations. Speaking on how the Diaspora influences his art, Frank muses, “I go to Senegal, West Africa a lot. Many of my collages are influenced from there.” As far as the media he works with, the sky is the limit. “I paint with oils, watercolors, and charcoal, anything that’s available,” says Frazier.

“When I see young people look with respect and appreciation for the art of today, I think of Sankofa, and how we must go back to the past to understand the present,” he observes. “Take Grant Hill, the famous basketball player. Young people heard Hill is exhibiting his art collection around the United States, and they want to be a part of it because of him, although it’s really the art he has collected they are coming to see! He is holding our heritage for our children.”

Although the artistic creations of many blacks were not embraced by “mainstream” art dealers, always positive, Frank admits, “My experience as a black artist has always been good. I like working with black- owned galleries because they also expose us artists to other people’s creativity, old artists and new. Shows like this[BHAS] allow us to make a living off of our creativity, with our people supporting us. Charles Bibbs and Poncho [Brown] have come under criticism for mass-producing their work, but I think it’s great to bring an artist’s work into many homes.”

Now living in Texas, Frazier is working on a series of paintings on the civil rights movement. He recently completed a road trip to various Southern cities that were pivotal to the struggle for equal rights; Jackson, Mississippi to Birmingham, Alabama, to Selma, to Tuskegee. This statesmen of art was “never motivated by money” when producing his art; the love of black history and culture and creation are his driving force. Frank Frazier serves up life’s wisdom as well as beautiful art; he offers this, “when life gets you down and you feel no one is helping you achieve your goals, remember this, even when somebody has their foot up your behind, you are still in front; You can still make it!”
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Woman Is on Canvas

Price:   $150
Woman Is – Profile Word Art
Open Edition Canvas Print
Gallery Wrap No framing needed – just hang and enjoy!
Size 27″ w x 20″ h x 1.5″

Print on Canvas 

Our high-quality printing process gives this print/poster its eloquent and striking appearance. Printed on Canvas this art reproduction has been printed using fine inks for lasting beauty. This is an affordable canvas print, enjoy!

Gallery Wrap No framing needed – just hang and enjoy!

Offered at  $150

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    Patriots of African Descent by Cal Massey

    image (51)

    OUT STOCK
    Patriots of African Descent
    by
     Cal Massey
    Limited  Edition Print
    Edition 241/2000

    Size 20″ x 24″ Approx

    About the Artist:
    MOORESTOWN-Cal Massey said that the wonderful images that appear on his canvases come to him during his daily meditations. He jots them on notecards and stores them in a filing cabinet that stands near the easel in his studio. “Everything in my work is spiritual,” the 80-year-old artist said. Entering the artist’s home/gallery studio on Dawson Street is almost a spiritual experience in itself. Messiah, a rendition of a black Christ as one with the earth, standing between the galaxies and the oceans, is the first painting a visitor notices. Near it hangs “Angel Heart”, which Massey considers one of his most popular works, inspired in part by the lack of black angels in traditional artwork. The angel’s hair, styled in a full Afro, is a tribute to the natural beauty of the black woman, Massey said. For years, Massey’s work has represented the black community in the art world. Now the artist, whose work already hangs on the walls of Congress members and rock stars, will see his work hang from the necks of Olympians. Massey was one of 13 artists from around the world chosen to design a commemorative medal for the 1996 ,Summer Olympics in Atlanta. His design, The High Jump, depicts a young black woman – her back arched slightly, her knees bent – as her thighs begin to top the bar. He said his is the only medal that features an athlete of color. “I’m proud to be a role model,” Massey said. The High Jump will be cast in sterling silver and run two inches in diameter. The medals will go on sale in late March or early April, and remain available until after the Games end.
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    SOLD – Five Mask by Frank Frazier

    frankmask

    SOLD
    Five Mask
    by Frank Frazier
    Original
    – 2010
    Mixed Media with Collage on Cardboard
    Size 7″ x 15″ Approx

    Frank Frazier began his work as a fine artist early, at the age of seven. He was creating paintings in his family’s Harlem, New York City home. A husband and father of five, he recalls growing up, “we were not poor, but my family was a little different.” At the age of 15, his family moved to downtown New York City, which precipitated his “getting into a lot of trouble” as a youngster. A move to Queens, New York, brought with it a stint at a boys’ institution in upstate New York, but it also marked the point where Frazier turned his life around. While at the school, he was responsible for creating art for the “different bunks.” Teachers noticed his talent and later as a Sergeant in the Army during Vietnam, officers gave him the responsibility of painting art and shirts for the platoons. Frazier’s designs included a mixture of different scenes which he completed for free; he and his fellow soldiers weren’t thinking about money when they did their work. Amazingly, after his stint in the service, “I recall my family throwing lots of my art away.” Ironically, today it is the love and support of his immediate and “great extended family” that inspires him.

    This sculptor, painter, and collagist cites the Creator as his biggest influence. “The Creator inspires me. He puts whatever I need in me. He also admits that he “loves black women and likes to use them in his art.” Frazier also credits Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence, and Elizabeth Cattlett as his biggest artistic inspirations. Speaking on how the Diaspora influences his art, Frank muses, “I go to Senegal, West Africa a lot. Many of my collages are influenced from there.” As far as the media he works with, the sky is the limit. “I paint with oils, watercolors, and charcoal, anything that’s available,” says Frazier.

    “When I see young people look with respect and appreciation for the art of today, I think of Sankofa, and how we must go back to the past to understand the present,” he observes. “Take Grant Hill, the famous basketball player. Young people heard Hill is exhibiting his art collection around the United States, and they want to be a part of it because of him, although it’s really the art he has collected they are coming to see! He is holding our heritage for our children.”

    Although the artistic creations of many blacks were not embraced by “mainstream” art dealers, always positive, Frank admits, “My experience as a black artist has always been good. I like working with black- owned galleries because they also expose us artists to other people’s creativity, old artists and new. Shows like this[BHAS] allow us to make a living off of our creativity, with our people supporting us. Charles Bibbs and Poncho [Brown] have come under criticism for mass-producing their work, but I think it’s great to bring an artist’s work into many homes.”

    Now living in Texas, Frazier is working on a series of paintings on the civil rights movement. He recently completed a road trip to various Southern cities that were pivotal to the struggle for equal rights; Jackson, Mississippi to Birmingham, Alabama, to Selma, to Tuskegee. This statesmen of art was “never motivated by money” when producing his art; the love of black history and culture and creation are his driving force. Frank Frazier serves up life’s wisdom as well as beautiful art; he offers this, “when life gets you down and you feel no one is helping you achieve your goals, remember this, even when somebody has their foot up your behind, you are still in front; You can still make it!”


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    SOLD – Jada’s Eyes by Laurie Cooper

    SOLD
    Jada’s Eyes
    by Laurie Cooper

    Original Pastel on Paper
    Size 22″ x 28″ Approx

    Laurie Cooper is artist born and based in Philadelphia, PA. She received Bachelor’s degree from the University of Arts and received her Master’s degree in Fine Arts from the University of Pennsylvania.  Laurie Cooper strives to highlight the inner and outer beauty of everything that she paints. She works diligently to showcase the special qualities of the black race. Her paintings are known for their inherent strength of character, strong unique facial features and richness of skin color. Collectors of her work include Dr. Samuel F. Quartey, Dr. Carey Tucker and Dr. Pete Smith.
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    SOLD – Odysseus: Circe (Exhibition) by Romare Bearden 

    SOLD
    Odysseus: Circe (Exhibition) – 1982
    by Romare Bearden 

    Serigraph Fine Art Poster – Art Basel
    Size  26″ x 47″ Approx

    Born in Charlotte, North Carolina in 1911, Romare Bearden, by the time of his death in 1988, had achieved a stature known by few artists during their lifetimes. He was, and still is, considered America’s greatest collagist and was thus honored by receiving the National Medal of Arts in 1987 from then President Reagan. The artist’s works are in the permanent collections of most every major American Museum including the Museum of Modern Art and the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrospectives of Bearden’s art have been organized by the Museum of Modern Art, the Mint Museum of Art, the Detroit Institute, the Studio Museum in Harlem and the Council for Creative Projects.
    Throughout his life, Bearden depicted many rituals and social customs of twentieth century rural Black America. The images of spiritual ceremonies, baptisms and burial, industrial hardships, musical arrangements and daily life have become the themes that critics and collectors most frequently associate with his work. Visually and emotionally stimulating, Romare Bearden’s collages and prints are beautiful to behold and fantastic to contemplate.
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    SOLD – Dance of the Virgin by Andrew Turner

     

    SOLD
    Dance of the Virgin
    by Andrew Turner
    Original Painting
    Size 14″ x 18″ Approx

    Andrew Turner was born in l944 in Chester, Pennsylvania. He was a graduate of Temple University’s Tyler School of Art. Andrew’s work has been widely acclaimed, with many solo exhibitions and participation in group exhibitions. He has taught art in grades K-1 2 in the Chester, Pennsylvania Public Schools and in correctional centers. His appointments include Artist-in-Residence and Curator, Deshong Museum, Chester, PA; Lecturer, Widener University; Lecturer, Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA; and, he toured and lectured in The People’s Republic of China. Collections which hold Andrew’s paintings include Woody Allen, Dr. Maya Angelou, ARCO Chemical Company, Bell Telephone Company, Dr. Constance Clayton, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cosby, Edie Huggins, Eric Lindros, Mr. and Mrs Louis Madonni, Moses Malone, Penn State University, the artist formerly known as Prince, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sorgenti, Swarthmore College, Mrs. Marilyn Wheaton, and Widener University Deshong Museum, just to name a few. He has been featured in numerous solo exhibitions and group exhibitions in the United States and abroad. His Philadelphia commissions include: WDAS FM (1996); Marco Solo, (published by J. Schwinn and G. Harlow, illustrated by Andrew Turner) Reverse Angle Productions, Inc. (I 995); and Robin Hood Dell, Fairmount Park (1985).

    “My paintings combine the drama inherent in seventeenth century Dutch painting with the brush work and the economy of the Impressionists. However, I look to the jazz idiom more so than to other contemporary visual artists for guidance and inspiration. I tend to measure the success of my pieces by how they stand up technically, emotionally and innovatively to a Coltrane solo or whether I’ve captured the spirit of the occasion, a la Ellington. The subject matter, sometimes nostalgic recollections of my days as a young tough, covers a myriad of common folk activities. The setting usually my native Chester, is a beehive of creative stimulation or a deteriorating ghetto depending on my state of mind. At the very least, hopefully, these vignettes of experience will help to provide insight into some African American lifestyles and serve as an inspiration to my students and others to continue the legacy of African American participation in the arts.”

    Andrew Turner 1944 – 2001

     

    SOLD – Blue Mood by Tyrone Frisby

    SOLD
    Blue Mood
    by Tyrone Frisby
    Original Acrylic on Canvas
    Size 16″ x 24″ Approx

    As far as I can remember, I was always in the arts. In kindergarten, I would paint large designs on newspaper print with poster paint. At ten my mother brought me my first pad & water color box. I painted from sceneries to abstract to patterns, after that. Art supplies always became my choice. In 1989 I was accepted to OVERBROOK HIGHSCHOOL. (ART MAGNET PROGRAM) There I learned how to put designs in perspective with shades & colors. When& how to use cold and warm colors. I learned different mediums, pen/ink line, pencil shading, clay, oil-painting, acrylics, and how to build a canvass from scratch. My First art show was in 1991.My instructor LES KAMISON entered my Sr. oil painting project in the all city art show at the original convention center 39th spruce. Where I won 1st prize from KAPPA ALPHA PSI MEN OF BACA. Also a Sr. class (OVERBROOK ART MAGNET ART-SHOW) was Held at St. Joseph university city ave. Phila. Pa. After graduating in June. I attended BARBER SCOTIA COLLEGE CONCORD N.C. Where I studied art as a major. In 1993 my junior year, I held several art shows at the school, as well attending several festivals in charlotte n.c. selling created original paintings. In 1995 I returned to Philadelphia. Young educated searching for a gallery to have art shows. I met Mercer Revcross C.E.O. of OCTOBER GALLERY was annually having the biggest art-shows on the east coast. ART-EXPO 1996-2005 At Temple University. Broad Cecil b. Moore.
    I exhibited sold several pieces. Also at the expo the gallery would have art auctions hosted by Mercer himself. I sold created original oil paintings and mix media acrylics. After that exposure other galleries wanted and collaborated with me to have shows and sell my created pieces of art. (1997) SADIE WEBSTER 19TH WALNUT. (1998)- GALLERY- 911. 911 ARCH ST. PHILADELPHIA PA. (1998-2000) well fed art gallery 3rd n arch Olde city phila.pa. (1999-2007)/May-Aug./ every 1st of the month I attended 1st Fridays artist row in Olde city Phila pa. In 2007-2009 I toured to Venice beach California entered in the artist lottery and won several times and slots to exhibit and, sell my new works to art tourists from all over the world. I returned to Philadelphia in 2010 and set up a studio creating pieces every day and some commission projects in the music industry. In the near future there are plans to take a winter tour from PHILA.to N.Y. to Miami.
    Thanks in your interest in reading my history to bring me to this vision to create handsome art out of blank wood or canvasses. My MOTTO AILLIA .Art is Love=Love is Art.
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    A Gift from God by Fred Mathews

    fred
    OUT STOCK
    A Gift from God by
    Fred Mathews
    Open Edition Print
    Size 24″ x 36″ Approx
    Fred Mathews is a self-taught artist that hails from Chicago, Illinois and is a graduate of Dunbar Vocational High School where he studied commerical and fine art. His artwork has been featured in a wide variety of magazines and galleries throughout the United States. These facilites include the Griffin Gallery, Good Life Magazine, The Raw Art Show, the October Gallery and more. Fred Mathews is a self-taught artist that uses a combination of air-brushing, acrylic and oils to create his popular contemporary and urban artwork.

    Dixieland by Andrew Turner

    Turner Dixieland

     

    SOLD OUT
    Dixieland
    by Andrew Turner

    Limited Edition (A/P) Offset Lithograph Print
    Signed by the Artist
    8.5″ x 11″

    Andrew Turner was born in 1944 in Chester, Pennsylvania. He was a graduate of Temple University’s Tyler School of Art. Andrew’s work has been widely acclaimed, with many solo exhibitions and participation in group exhibitions. He has taught art in grades K-1 2 in the Chester, Pennsylvania Public Schools and in correctional centers. His appointments include Artist-in-Residence and Curator, Deshong Museum, Chester, PA; Lecturer, Widener University; Lecturer, Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, PA; and, he toured and lectured in The People’s Republic of China. Collections which hold Andrew’s paintings include Woody Allen, Dr. Maya Angelou, ARCO Chemical Company, Bell Telephone Company, Dr. Constance Clayton, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cosby, Edie Huggins, Eric Lindros, Mr. and Mrs Louis Madonni, Moses Malone, Penn State University, the artist formerly known as Prince, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Sorgenti, Swarthmore College, Mrs. Marilyn Wheaton, and Widener University Deshong Museum, just to name a few. He has been featured in numerous solo exhibitions and group exhibitions in the United States and abroad. His Philadelphia commissions include: WDAS FM (1996); Marco Solo, (published by J. Schwinn and G. Harlow, illustrated by Andrew Turner) Reverse Angle Productions, Inc. (I 995); and Robin Hood Dell, Fairmount Park (1985).

    “My paintings combine the drama inherent in seventeenth century Dutch painting with the brush work and the economy of the Impressionists. However, I look to the jazz idiom more so than to other contemporary visual artists for guidance and inspiration. I tend to measure the success of my pieces by how they stand up technically, emotionally and innovatively to a Coltrane solo or whether I’ve captured the spirit of the occasion, a la Ellington. The subject matter, sometimes nostalgic recollections of my days as a young tough, covers a myriad of common folk activities. The setting usually my native Chester, is a beehive of creative stimulation or a deteriorating ghetto depending on my state of mind. At the very least, hopefully, these vignettes of experience will help to provide insight into some African American lifestyles and serve as an inspiration to my students and others to continue the legacy of African American participation in the arts.”

    Andrew Turner 1944 – 2001
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    SOLD – Love Spirits by James Denmark

    image (33)

    SOLD
    Love Spirits
    by James Denmark
    Signed in Pencil by the Artist 1977

    Print Open Edition
    Size 19″x 27″ Approx

    James Denmark, born in Winter Haven, Florida in 1936, is part of an artistic family. He was exposed to color and form at an early age by his grandmother, a wire sculptor and quilt artist. His grandfather was a bricklayer noted for his unique custom designed molds and his mother was gifted with an intuitive eye for design and detail. This rich beginning is the root of James Denmark’s creative expression.

    Denmark earned his Master of Fine Arts Degree at Pratt Institute of Fine Arts in New York. During this period he was heavily influenced by the abstract expressionists Jackson Pollock, Clifford Still, and William deKooning. The African-American masters Norman Lewis, Romare Bearden, Jacob Lawrence and Ernest Crichlow instilled in him and appreciation of African American artistic heritage.

    Denmark’s collages, watercolors, woodcuts and reproductions are consistently and eagerly sought by galleries and collectors worldwide. James Denmark lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.
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    SOLD – Soul by Laurie Cooper

    SOLD
    Soul
    by Laurie Cooper

    Original Pastel on Paper
    Size 19″ x 25″ Approx

    Laurie Cooper is artist born and based in Philadelphia, PA. She received Bachelor’s degree from the University of Arts and received her Master’s degree in Fine Arts from the University of Pennsylvania.  Laurie Cooper strives to highlight the inner and outer beauty of everything that she paints. She works diligently to showcase the special qualities of the black race. Her paintings are known for their inherent strength of character, strong unique facial features and richness of skin color. Collectors of her work include Dr. Samuel F. Quartey, Dr. Carey Tucker and Dr. Pete Smith.
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    SOLD – Untitled (Two Famale Dancers) by Charles Searles

    SOLD
    Untitled (Two Famale Dancers)
    by Charles Searles
    Original On Canvas
    Size: 70″ x 68.5″   Approx

    Charles Searles was born in Philadelphia to Charles senior and Catherine Searles (formerly Catherine Hall). He was the second of 8 children – Phyllis, (Charles), Barbara, Frances, Rose, Catherine, Elizabeth and only brother, Derrick.

    Charles Searles was always an artist. He never considered being anything else. He got his first watercolor set at age four and always preferred drawing and painting over other childhood games. His mother was encouraging and supported his creativity, making sure art supplies were abundant. He was popular in grade school: the kid that could draw anything, design and sew clothes, make flip books, build scooters. He went to Salsburger High School, where his counselor tried to steer him away from art and toward shop class. Although he could easily do the work, his interest never swayed, and he looked outside school for more art classes. He attended Saturday classes at the Fleisher Art Memorial.

    Charles worked with his father doing carpentry, construction and building renovation. He learned quickly and became a skilled craftsman and house painter. He continued to build these skills and renovated several  of his own homes and studios throughout his life, taking a space that needed work and turning it into a beautiful living or working space.

    At a young age, Charles found himself a father to be. He married Mary McDaniels and joined the  armed service to provide  for his family. He returned home to raise two children, his daughter, Vanessa and his step son, Gregory. He continued to work, raise a family and pursue art. His youngest child, Charmaine, was born in 1958. Around this time, Charles entered the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art. Here his talent truly began to flourish in an atmosphere of serious artistic dedication and among masters, teachers and works of art. His work embraced the tumultuous 60’s and also reflected as his own family life and his surroundings.  Searles also attended the University of Pennsylvania  for liberal arts. He worked in the lab with noted scientists and engineers and sharpened his drafting skills illustrating their technical information for books still used by students and professors today.

    By the  late 60’s, Charles lost his youngest child to a rare form of cancer. This took a toll on his whole family. Some of his paintings from that  time reflect dark  his turmoil.  He continued to paint and work through his struggle. His powerful work was gaining recognition.

    Before graduating the Academy, Charles received the Cresson Memorial traveling Scholarship. He traveled to Europe and met a new friend, David Wright,  in Amsterdam. They remained solid friends all his life. The following year, Charles received the Ware memorial Traveling Scholarship and was the first student to use these funds to travel to Africa. He paired up with David, landed in Luxembourg, bought a van and headed first to northern Africa.  David recalls ” Charles was determined to make it to Nigeria. He said he felt a strong calling and related to it as the “Homeland”. We were told we would never make it across the Sahara in our VW bus. We drove back to Casa Blanca, he flew to Lagos and I remained in Morocco.  Nigeria was like  a piece of a puzzle that completed his soul.” His travels in Africa marked his life and work forever – the life, the rhythms, the patterns, the energy.

    When Searles returned to Philadelphia, he began teaching at the Ile Ife Cultural Center. His African influence was enthusiastically received and was evident in his teaching drawing and painting. He also began to seriously pursue his other talent – percussion. He played all types of percussion instruments and seemed to be able to pick up anything and just know how to make it sound good. His favorite was congas, which he continued to play throughout his life. Music and rhythm were always an integral part of his painting and sculpture. It was during his time at IleIfe that he began his  “Dancer” Series.  This series marked a change in his life, celebrating his new sense of renewal and the African experience.  The African  influence, coupled with percussion and movement were clear in all his paintings and his work was getting more recognition. He was awarded his first mural commission at the William G. Green Federal Building in Philadelphia. The mural, entitled “Celebration” is still on view today. At this time, Charles was also hired as a drawing teacher at (then) Philadelphia College of Art. He remained a professor with PCA for over twenty years.

    All the while, Searles had his eye on New York. He frequently visited NYC and periodically packed up the family to participate in the Village Art Show, then a serious outdoor exhibition featuring artists from New York and around the country. He made plans to eventually move to New York, meeting many new artists, enjoying the energy of the City.

    Back home in West Philadelphia,  his daughter, Vanessa recalls being surrounded by people from all cultures and all parts of the world. Their house had a constant influx of visitors, artists and musicians, among them Hugh Masekela and Miriam Makebah. Vanessa attributes her MSW degree due, in part, to growing up open to such diversity.

    In 1978 Charles moved to New York City. He found a large, raw space, an old sewing factory, on Broadway and Bleeker, and made it his own. Once again, his ability to renovate space came into play. He remained there the rest of his life. At the time, the neighborhood was less than desirable, unlike the bustling shopping mecca it is today. His neighborhood grew, his work grew and his connections with other artists grew. He continued to commute to Philadelphia teaching part time. He met Kathleen Spicer, an art student, in 1983.  They married in 1985. Together they shared a wonderful, open, artistic, social and creative experience. Their New Years Day party each year was legendary!

    Charles moved away from painting and into sculpture. His sculptures were like paintings that grew out into space. The new sculptures maintained the vibrant color and patterns from his paintings but seemed to dance in three dimensions. These new works embodied a live sense of rhythm and energy – trademarks that he maintained throughout his career, whether in wood, bronze or aluminum.

    Over the years, Charles participated in over 60 group show and 25 solo exhibitions. His work has been shown nationally and internationally. He maintained a connection to Philadelphia and showed with Sande Webster for over 20 years. More than a gallery owner, Sande was a good friend. Says Sande, “Charles Searles was a visionary whose artistic integrity and creative spirit inspired all who knew him. From the minute “Mr. Searles” and I met more than twenty five years ago, his voice informed my actions with regard to racism and the implicit important of the artist in the artist/gallery relationship. It will continue to do so.”

    Searles’ travels included France, Switzerland, Germany, Holland, Denmark, Spain, Morocco, Nigeria, Ghana, Japan, Korea, Mexico and Cuba. His works are included in numerous collections, among them, the Smithsonian Institution, the Dallas, Montclair, Afro-American, Philadelphia and Charlottenborg (Denmark) Museums. He is also included in public and private collections too numerous to detail. Among the Public Art commissions he was awarded, are most recently, five aluminum sculptures for the Delaware River Port Authority, five interior bronze sculptures for the NYC Mass Transit Authority, an exterior bronze for the First District Plaza in Philadelphia, and a painted aluminum relief for Amtrack’s Newark New Jersey Station. Among the many awards Charles received are the Pollock – Krasner Foundation Award, The Adolph and Esther Gottleib Foundation, the Creative Arts Project (CAPS) Fellowship and the National Endowment for the Arts.

    Despite all his accolades, Charles remained modest and open. He was quick to embrace new people and ideas. He constantly strived to try new concepts and materials. His own statement reflects his genuine graciousness –

    “My work is abstract, painted wood or aluminum sculptures that have a strong sense of life: faces, figures or animals. My sculptures are very animated and have a feeling of music and dance. It is often said that my work has a strong multicultural feeling and connects especially well with people of color – Caribbean, African, Hispanics, Indian and Asian. All people have a kinship with my work. Each piece is positive, energetic and is an affirmation or celebration of life. The language is clear and universal.”

    His wife of 23 years, Kathleen Spicer adds “Charles was his work and his work was him. Inseparable. Our lives were all about art.  We lived each day as if it was a gift. To me, he was enchanted.

    His vision was clear – he could envision something and make it come to life as easy as breathing. Genius.

    He was never negative. Every one that ever met Charles loved him. Even people that never met him loved him through his work. He was always kind, gracious, generous and dignified and never placed himself above other people. I am blessed to have so many wonderful memories.  Our life together was a beautiful adventure.

    Charles made the world a better place.”

    Charles speaks loud and clear.

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    SOLD – Untitled (Dancer) by Charles Searles

     

    SOLD
    Untitled (Dancer)
    by Charles Searles
    Original Acrylic On Canvas
    Size: 65.5″ x 64.5″   Approx

    Charles Searles was born in Philadelphia to Charles senior and Catherine Searles (formerly Catherine Hall). He was the second of 8 children – Phyllis, (Charles), Barbara, Frances, Rose, Catherine, Elizabeth and only brother, Derrick.

    Charles Searles was always an artist. He never considered being anything else. He got his first watercolor set at age four and always preferred drawing and painting over other childhood games. His mother was encouraging and supported his creativity, making sure art supplies were abundant. He was popular in grade school: the kid that could draw anything, design and sew clothes, make flip books, build scooters. He went to Salsburger High School, where his counselor tried to steer him away from art and toward shop class. Although he could easily do the work, his interest never swayed, and he looked outside school for more art classes. He attended Saturday classes at the Fleisher Art Memorial.

    Charles worked with his father doing carpentry, construction and building renovation. He learned quickly and became a skilled craftsman and house painter. He continued to build these skills and renovated several  of his own homes and studios throughout his life, taking a space that needed work and turning it into a beautiful living or working space.

    At a young age, Charles found himself a father to be. He married Mary McDaniels and joined the  armed service to provide  for his family. He returned home to raise two children, his daughter, Vanessa and his step son, Gregory. He continued to work, raise a family and pursue art. His youngest child, Charmaine, was born in 1958. Around this time, Charles entered the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art. Here his talent truly began to flourish in an atmosphere of serious artistic dedication and among masters, teachers and works of art. His work embraced the tumultuous 60’s and also reflected as his own family life and his surroundings.  Searles also attended the University of Pennsylvania  for liberal arts. He worked in the lab with noted scientists and engineers and sharpened his drafting skills illustrating their technical information for books still used by students and professors today.

    By the  late 60’s, Charles lost his youngest child to a rare form of cancer. This took a toll on his whole family. Some of his paintings from that  time reflect dark  his turmoil.  He continued to paint and work through his struggle. His powerful work was gaining recognition.

    Before graduating the Academy, Charles received the Cresson Memorial traveling Scholarship. He traveled to Europe and met a new friend, David Wright,  in Amsterdam. They remained solid friends all his life. The following year, Charles received the Ware memorial Traveling Scholarship and was the first student to use these funds to travel to Africa. He paired up with David, landed in Luxembourg, bought a van and headed first to northern Africa.  David recalls ” Charles was determined to make it to Nigeria. He said he felt a strong calling and related to it as the “Homeland”. We were told we would never make it across the Sahara in our VW bus. We drove back to Casa Blanca, he flew to Lagos and I remained in Morocco.  Nigeria was like  a piece of a puzzle that completed his soul.” His travels in Africa marked his life and work forever – the life, the rhythms, the patterns, the energy.

    When Searles returned to Philadelphia, he began teaching at the Ile Ife Cultural Center. His African influence was enthusiastically received and was evident in his teaching drawing and painting. He also began to seriously pursue his other talent – percussion. He played all types of percussion instruments and seemed to be able to pick up anything and just know how to make it sound good. His favorite was congas, which he continued to play throughout his life. Music and rhythm were always an integral part of his painting and sculpture. It was during his time at IleIfe that he began his  “Dancer” Series.  This series marked a change in his life, celebrating his new sense of renewal and the African experience.  The African  influence, coupled with percussion and movement were clear in all his paintings and his work was getting more recognition. He was awarded his first mural commission at the William G. Green Federal Building in Philadelphia. The mural, entitled “Celebration” is still on view today. At this time, Charles was also hired as a drawing teacher at (then) Philadelphia College of Art. He remained a professor with PCA for over twenty years.

    All the while, Searles had his eye on New York. He frequently visited NYC and periodically packed up the family to participate in the Village Art Show, then a serious outdoor exhibition featuring artists from New York and around the country. He made plans to eventually move to New York, meeting many new artists, enjoying the energy of the City.

    Back home in West Philadelphia,  his daughter, Vanessa recalls being surrounded by people from all cultures and all parts of the world. Their house had a constant influx of visitors, artists and musicians, among them Hugh Masekela and Miriam Makebah. Vanessa attributes her MSW degree due, in part, to growing up open to such diversity.

    In 1978 Charles moved to New York City. He found a large, raw space, an old sewing factory, on Broadway and Bleeker, and made it his own. Once again, his ability to renovate space came into play. He remained there the rest of his life. At the time, the neighborhood was less than desirable, unlike the bustling shopping mecca it is today. His neighborhood grew, his work grew and his connections with other artists grew. He continued to commute to Philadelphia teaching part time. He met Kathleen Spicer, an art student, in 1983.  They married in 1985. Together they shared a wonderful, open, artistic, social and creative experience. Their New Years Day party each year was legendary!

    Charles moved away from painting and into sculpture. His sculptures were like paintings that grew out into space. The new sculptures maintained the vibrant color and patterns from his paintings but seemed to dance in three dimensions. These new works embodied a live sense of rhythm and energy – trademarks that he maintained throughout his career, whether in wood, bronze or aluminum.

    Over the years, Charles participated in over 60 group show and 25 solo exhibitions. His work has been shown nationally and internationally. He maintained a connection to Philadelphia and showed with Sande Webster for over 20 years. More than a gallery owner, Sande was a good friend. Says Sande, “Charles Searles was a visionary whose artistic integrity and creative spirit inspired all who knew him. From the minute “Mr. Searles” and I met more than twenty five years ago, his voice informed my actions with regard to racism and the implicit important of the artist in the artist/gallery relationship. It will continue to do so.”

    Searles’ travels included France, Switzerland, Germany, Holland, Denmark, Spain, Morocco, Nigeria, Ghana, Japan, Korea, Mexico and Cuba. His works are included in numerous collections, among them, the Smithsonian Institution, the Dallas, Montclair, Afro-American, Philadelphia and Charlottenborg (Denmark) Museums. He is also included in public and private collections too numerous to detail. Among the Public Art commissions he was awarded, are most recently, five aluminum sculptures for the Delaware River Port Authority, five interior bronze sculptures for the NYC Mass Transit Authority, an exterior bronze for the First District Plaza in Philadelphia, and a painted aluminum relief for Amtrack’s Newark New Jersey Station. Among the many awards Charles received are the Pollock – Krasner Foundation Award, The Adolph and Esther Gottleib Foundation, the Creative Arts Project (CAPS) Fellowship and the National Endowment for the Arts.

    Despite all his accolades, Charles remained modest and open. He was quick to embrace new people and ideas. He constantly strived to try new concepts and materials. His own statement reflects his genuine graciousness –

    “My work is abstract, painted wood or aluminum sculptures that have a strong sense of life: faces, figures or animals. My sculptures are very animated and have a feeling of music and dance. It is often said that my work has a strong multicultural feeling and connects especially well with people of color – Caribbean, African, Hispanics, Indian and Asian. All people have a kinship with my work. Each piece is positive, energetic and is an affirmation or celebration of life. The language is clear and universal.”

    His wife of 23 years, Kathleen Spicer adds “Charles was his work and his work was him. Inseparable. Our lives were all about art.  We lived each day as if it was a gift. To me, he was enchanted.

    His vision was clear – he could envision something and make it come to life as easy as breathing. Genius.

    He was never negative. Every one that ever met Charles loved him. Even people that never met him loved him through his work. He was always kind, gracious, generous and dignified and never placed himself above other people. I am blessed to have so many wonderful memories.  Our life together was a beautiful adventure.

    Charles made the world a better place.”

    Charles speaks loud and clear.

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