| The
sumptuous color etching is based on flowers that Art Hansen can
see from his home on Vashon Island, just south of Seattle. The flowers
burst with color as they push against the edge of the space.
Although he is a Seattle native, Hansen's artistic sensibilities
fuse a variety of influences from America, Europe and Japan. Following
his studies at the University of Washington and the University of
Minnesota, Hansen was awarded a Fullbright Fellowship, and studied
at the Akademie der Bildenden Kunste in Munich, Germany. He also
received a Pulitzer Prize for Art in 1952. The attention to subtle
detail seen in his prints and his studies in Munich and nearby Nuremberg,
have earned him comparisons to the great Renaissance artist Albrecht
Dürer. At the same time, his stylized and deceptively simple compositions
bring to mind Japanese woodblock artists such as Hiroshigi.
Mr. Hansen has exhibited in galleries around the United States and
his work is in collections of the Bayerische Graphische Sammlugn,
Munich; Library of Congress, Washington, DC; University of Oregon,
New York Public Library, and Seattle Art Museum.
Special information: Color etching, signed and numbered.
Includes a certificate of authenticity. Sold unframed.
Image Dimensions: 6 3/8 x 5 ½ inches
Paper Dimensions: 11 x 15 inches
Produced by: Elizabeth Tapper, Print Maker
Other works in the Smithsonian Art Collectors Program by Art Hansen:
Small Treasures, Rose 1995
Small Treasures,
Two Roses 1997 |