Seven Screenprints: White Night; Dune; Mirador East I; Kochie Kite; Market: Electric Blue; Market: Celosia Market: Sunflowers
Betty Louise Kubalak
Seven Screenprints: White Night; Dune; Mirador East I; Kochie Kite; Market: Electric Blue; Market: Celosia Market: Sunflowers
Artist: Betty Louise Kubalak
Medium: Prints
Price:
$1,750.00
Gallery:
Second Story Art
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Details
Materials: Acrylic on paper
Dimensions: 26" x 31" x 4"
Condition: Fine. White Night: slight age to toning to mat and mild staining and scattered foxing to the center; Dune: Slight stain to upper right corner; Market Electric Blue: slightly wavy to the left edge of image; Market Celosia: slight wear to mat.
Finish: Unframed
About the Item
White Night. Numbered 13/20; Dune. Numbered 8/16; Mirador East I. Numbered 3/12; Kochie Kite. Numbered 12/12; Market: Electric Blue. Numbered 8/10; Market: Celosia. Numbered 7/10; Market: Sunflowers. Numbered 9/10. All screenprints bear artist’s signature in the lower right corner. Dimensions White Night: image:19" x 23"; mat:25"x 29. Dune: image 19" x 23"; mat:24"x 28.5". Mirador East I: image 20" x 24"; mat: 26" x 31". Kochie Kite: image 21.5" x 15"; mat: 25.5" x 19.5". Market Electric Blue: image 12.5" x 10"; mat 21" x 18". Market Celosia: 14" x 10"; mat 18" x 21.5". Market Sunflowers: image 14" x 10"; mat 18" x 21.5". The measurements given in the dimension field represent the items when stacked for shipping purposes.
About the Artist
Betty Louise Kubalak
A well-known artist, she was a founding member of the Printmakers Inc. in Alexandria, Virginia's Torpedo Factory Art Center. She created more than 600 original images for silkscreen print editions and she has been recognized with awards from the Art League and the Northern Virginia Fine Arts Association. As part of the D.C. Commission on the Arts & Humanities “Party Animals” project in 2001, Kubalak's elephant “Blue Sky” was displayed outside the Washington Post headquarters before being sold at auction.
About the Gallery
Second Story Art
Since purchased by Allan Stypeck in 1974, Second Story Books has grown from its small second floor location in northwest Washington, D.C., to become one of the largest used and rare bookstores in the world. During the pre-internet era of bookselling, Second Story Books had six locations from Alexandria to Baltimore, including the famous Georgetown Saville Bookstore location. With the growth of the internet, Second Story Books consolidated its brick-and-mortar presence into our two locations.
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