Béla Kádár ‘Frauenfigur in Häusergasse’ 1930s.
(Source: artnet.com)
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Béla Kádár ‘Frauenfigur in Häusergasse’ 1930s.
(Source: artnet.com)
Coreen Spellman ‘Still Life with Japanese Fan’ 1960s.
Coreen Spellman was one of Texas' most renowned artists in the 1930's through the 1960's, and probably the most important of all the Early Texas Woman artists. Among the woman artists of her era, Coreen Spellman's desirability is unmatched with auction comps of up to $40,000! Her major Exhibitions include the Edgar B Davis Wildflower Competition, the 1936 Texas Centennial, Texas General Exhibitions (numerous), Dallas Allied Arts Exhibitions (numerous), the Witte Museum, the Kansas City Art Institute (numerous), the Southern States Art League Circuit Exhibitions (numerous), the National Exhibition of American Art - Rockefeller Center New York, the 1939 Worlds Fair (American Art Today, 1939), the Whitney Museum, the National Academy of Design, the Chicago Art Institute (numerous), the Brooklyn Museum, the Joslyn Museum among many others. Spellman was also a charter member of the Texas Printmakers and participated in their circuit exhibitions for many years. Her primary media were watercolour and printmaking.Besides her own art, Coreen Spellman influenced countless numbers of younger woman artists as professor of painting, illustration, and drawing at the College of Industrial Arts from 1925 until 1974 (which later became known as Texas Woman’s University). She also taught art at the Dallas Museum of Fine Arts.
(via eBay)
Robert McIntosh ‘The Factory’ 1943.
David Bomberg 'St. Pauls' 1944