Beirut/Sirop, 2007 - Hope Gangloff
About the Work
About Beirut/Sirop
Artist Hope Gangloff's drawings have the offhand precision of a snapshot, capturing people and objects with bright, sharp colors and an exquisite line. Working in the spare, crisp tradition of such artists as Egon Schiele and Alphonse Mucha—Gangloff ...Read More
Artist Hope Gangloff's drawings have the offhand precision of a snapshot, capturing people and objects with bright, sharp colors and an exquisite line. Working in the spare, crisp tradition of such artists as Egon Schiele and Alphonse Mucha—Gangloff was an illustrator for the New Yorker and other publications earlier in her career—she presents a thoroughly contemporary vision of life in 21st-century New York.Read Less
About the Artist
About Hope Gangloff
Read Hope Gangloff on her working process
Hope Gangloff is known for creating vibrant and truthful portraits of her friends as a way to share ...Read More
Hope Gangloff is known for creating vibrant and truthful portraits of her friends as a way to share ...Read More
Read Hope Gangloff on her working process
Hope Gangloff is known for creating vibrant and truthful portraits of her friends as a way to share her view of modern American life. By capturing this generation of young adults in her illustrations and paintings, she documents this era's struggle during these tumultuous economic times.
Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum Curator Mónica Ramírez-Montagut says about Gangloff's works: "Her paintings and drawings make us feel her and her subjects and feel for them as well; they make us feel for ourselves and the period to which we belong. In the midst of the struggles of our current everyday lives, Hope finds both beauty and passion."
Gangloff studied fine art at Cooper Union in New York. After leaving art school, Gangloff worked in a bronze foundry and made illustrations for publications such as the New York Times, the New Yorker, Spin Magazine, and Built by Wendy. Her work now hangs in galleries and museums around the world.Read Less
Hope Gangloff is known for creating vibrant and truthful portraits of her friends as a way to share her view of modern American life. By capturing this generation of young adults in her illustrations and paintings, she documents this era's struggle during these tumultuous economic times.
Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum Curator Mónica Ramírez-Montagut says about Gangloff's works: "Her paintings and drawings make us feel her and her subjects and feel for them as well; they make us feel for ourselves and the period to which we belong. In the midst of the struggles of our current everyday lives, Hope finds both beauty and passion."
Gangloff studied fine art at Cooper Union in New York. After leaving art school, Gangloff worked in a bronze foundry and made illustrations for publications such as the New York Times, the New Yorker, Spin Magazine, and Built by Wendy. Her work now hangs in galleries and museums around the world.Read Less
Description
Ink and gouache on paper.Authentication
Signed by the artistShipping
Ships in 10-14 business days.This work is final sale and not eligible for return.
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