Greetings!
Winter Blues Be Gone! Prints spanning across three different generations show a steady progression in abstraction. Brooklyn artist, Rostarr's contemporary silkscreens are an interplay of modern art and design. Paul Henry Ramirez's pop-inspired biomorphic etchings offer a sensual look at abstraction by combing surrealist techniques. André Lanskoy's visual imagery is coming from a more formal exploration of color and form.
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Curator's Picks |
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Browse Karline Moeller's picks below!
Rostarr
Praefectus Astana, 2009
Silkscreen on handmade paper
30 x 22 inches
Edition of 25
Signed and numbered
Unframed
$1,000
Rostarr is a young contemporary artist who creates works that blurs the line between fine art and graphic design. With his finger on the pulse of the Brooklyn art scene, his high impact art has been featured in prominent exhibitions at the hottest galleries in New York City.

Paul Henry Ramirez's Juicy Little Passion #4, 2005 Etching and chine colle Image: 13 1/2 x 12 inches Paper: 21 x 18 inches Edition of 25 Unframed $1,500 Paul Henry Ramirez's sexy and bold etchings are a profusion of pop-inspired, fluorescent colors. His curvaceous biomorphic forms enliven the surface where contrasting colors and shapes dance around the page.
André LanskoyBlue Composition Lithograph 25 3/4 x 19 3.4 inches Unframed $600 André Lanskoy (March 31, 1902-August 24, 1976) was an abstract painter and printmaker who is considered one of the most important artists of the 20th century. He studied with Wassily Kandinsky and Paul Klee and was associated with the School of Paris and Tachisme. Having been exposed to Impressionist and Modern master works at various museums, he became particularly influenced by Vincent van Gogh and James Ensor's use of color. His abstract compositions focus on the interaction between color and form.
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About the Curator | |
Karline Moeller is an independent curator who co-owned Moeller Snow Gallery until it closed in March 2009. Prior to that Karline worked in the Contemporary Art department at Sotheby's. She also worked alongside Tim Nye at Nyehaus Gallery for two years. In the past year Karline has co-curated a group exhibition at Marlborough Gallery Chelsea as well as a solo show at Ramis Barquet Gallery. Karline continues to work with and represent artists that she has exhibited and collaborates with various other curators and galleries. She recently curated In the Cups, a film by Nemo Librizzi at the Art Production Fund in New York. She received her degree from Franklin College Switzerland and the New School in New York.
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