Maxwell Alexander Gallery is bringing back its hugely popular Black Friday show on November 27. Works will be available on the gallery’s website, and collectors are encouraged to be ready at 10 a.m. PST. Previous years have seen more than 75 works of art sell within the first 10 minutes. The works are available for only 24 hours.
Artists in the small works show include Scott Burdick, G. Russell Case, Len Chmiel, Josh Clare, Nicholas Coleman, Glenn Dean, Josh Elliott, Natalie Featherston, Danny Galieote, Logan Maxwell Hagege, Bryan Haynes, Daniel Keys, Susan Lyon, Eric Merrell, John Moyers, Terri Kelly Moyers, Howard Post, Grant Redden, Tim Solliday, Dustin Van Wechel, Dennis Ziemienski, Joshua LaRock, Ray Roberts, Steve Wrubel and many more.
Kim Wiggins, Old Mission Santa Barbara, oil, 9 x 12”
Brett Allen Johnson will be offering a new landscape piece, Painted Hills, done in his unique contemporary style. “I usually do these little paintings just to explore an idea. This is one of many I’ve done of that wonderful area near Cameron, Arizona, where the hills are full of beautiful purple, red and grey clay,” he says. “It shows the otherworldly stripes in stark relief, and I remembered coming across several cattle chutes and corrals in the area, a sign of life in an otherwise hostile environment with little vegetation to forage. It’s about the connection between earth and man and, of course, about color and pattern at the same time.”
Brett Allen Johnson, Painted Hills, oil, 8 x 8”
Another artist offering new work is Kim Wiggins, who will be showing Old Mission Santa Barbara. “For years I’ve explored the treasured missions of the Southwest through a series of iconic paintings. Along California’s coast alone stand some 21 historic adobe and stone structures…timeless monuments of unsurpassed beauty. Each year these stunning creations of California’s distant past draw more people than any other historical attraction,” Wiggins says. “Founded in 1786, Old Mission Santa Barbara stands out as my personal favorite. My wife and I have stayed in Santa Barbara a number of times simply hoping to explore new aspects of this alluring structure. In today’s predawn light, perhaps things haven’t changed that much over the last 200 years…for one still can’t help but stand in awe while viewing this enduring masterpiece.” —
Upcoming Show
Up to 40 works
November 27, 2020
Maxwell Alexander Gallery
406 W. Pico Boulevard, Los Angeles, CA 90015
(213) 275-1060
www.maxwellalexandergallery.com
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