Artist: Chuck Arnoldi
Medium: Print
Limited Edition: 90/100
Year: 1992
Height (inches): 22
Width (inches): 18
Signed by the artist
Signed Area: front
This piece is unframed.
Description of piece:
Contemporary American abstract painter and sculptor Charles “Chuck” Arnoldi’s work is regularly seen in the US and abroad including the Guggenheim, MOMA in NYC, LACMA and many others. This limited edition run was created expressly for Crossroads. Print 90/100 is now being offered to a discerning collector.
Artist bio:
Charles (Chuck) Arnoldi, is an American painter, sculptor and printmaker. He was born April 10, 1946 in Dayton, Ohio.
Charles Arnoldi has been described as an artist who “draws in space” to create his unique assemblage works of art. Throughout his long career he has been fascinated with shape and pattern as they apply to advance formal concerns, from his 1970’s paintings made entirely of natural forms, to his current work, of which architect Frank Gehry has said, “the maturing Arnoldi has a secure color sense and the ability to work at large scale as well as to produce tiny, exquisite watercolors.” Gehry also cites Arnoldi as an influence in his own work, and says, “this is an artist whose best is yet to come, who is still experimenting and still willing to risk”.
Arnoldi has been making art for over forty years, first achieving major acclaim in the 1970’s. A decade later he had established himself as one of the most prominent painters in southern California. Arnoldi’s work resides in numerous collections and museums throughout the United States, including the Museum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, and the Guggenheim, Bilbao, Spain.
Notice of Updated Buyer Terms of Use
We have recently updated our Buyer Terms of Use. We encourage you to review the revised terms to ensure continued understanding and compliance. By continuing to use our platform, you acknowledge and agree to the updated terms. View the updated Terms of Use