Featured Thrift store art....

Discussion in 'Art' started by verybrad, Dec 26, 2022.

  1. Boland

    Boland Well-Known Member

    Nice buy. Would be interesting to know if it’s a original or some kind of fancy ‘dressed-up’ print. Great detail on those cherries.
     
  2. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

  3. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    moreotherstuff likes this.
  4. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    I don't think it is either. The other one Debora found is though, without a doubt. Either way it's going up on my wall.

    I was wondering about that. It's on a stretched canvas for sure.
     
    mirana likes this.
  5. mirana

    mirana Well-Known Member

    Usually the tell is the back. Bright white to the edge, machine cut, uniform surface. 20th c paintings don't tend to have the glass-like varnish or flat look so you can also usually see brush strokes that follow the lines of the piece under the top varnish.
     
    Boland likes this.
  6. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    I suppose I can open the back, but it's papered over. If I'd done that in the first place I'd already know for sure. I suppose since I'm keeping it I can slice it.
     
    Boland likes this.
  7. mirana

    mirana Well-Known Member

    I'm always gonna say give it a rip. If it's a genuine painting they should have holes in the dust paper to breathe anyway. It's just to pretty up the back and keep dust off the inner frame. It's not integral to preservation. And it's easy to replace with a roll of craft paper and double sided tape: tape on edge of frame, paper larger than the frame laid down, press, and trim edges. You can gently use scissors but the professionals use a plain razor blade angled at the sides.
     
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  8. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    I took a scissors to it. It would be a pig to replace given what the framing shop did - got all fancy. Alas I saw a Philipps head screw in there and no paint on the sides of the canvas. I have a bad hunch it's just a print with a fancy varnish job.
     
    Boland likes this.
  9. Boland

    Boland Well-Known Member

    08CED7CA-040A-484A-8792-D2A1C8823C1C.jpeg 4C40A863-03C1-44EB-8DD2-66B6D8F1412D.jpeg 63EF9205-1665-41DC-BA03-19F67820B85F.jpeg A little different. But still a nice buy for just under $2.
     
  10. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    All you need are a pile of D&D players and that's SOLD, if you're selling it. Dragons always find a home. Or a hoard.
     
  11. verybrad

    verybrad Well-Known Member

    Picked these two large paintings up the other day for $25.00 for the pair. They are so large that I hung them in the stairwell going down to the basement for now. I needed them out of the van and had no good place to store them. Consequently, the photos are not the best.

    This is 42" square. Pretty new with canvas stapled to stretchers. Unsigned and no marks of any kind. I don't know if this is a factory painting or not. They usually have some kind of spurious signature or at least some numbers on the back. Whomever did it was channeling Rothko .... LOL!
    thriftptg49.jpg

    This is a hand painted reproduction of CA artist, Debra Scolari. I guess this makes it an authorized factory painting (?) No signature on the work but paperwork with it identifies it as Celebration Tree Art, by Scolari. I found a couple other examples that exhibit color variations from this one. 48" x 48".
    thriftptg50.jpg
    thriftptg50a.jpg
     
    stracci and Boland like this.
  12. evelyb30

    evelyb30 Well-Known Member

    Made for pretty, to sell for money.
     
    mirana likes this.
  13. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    According to her web site, she's not an artist but rather the "creative director" of a "design company." And... "Scolari Studio has collaborated with architects, interior designers, set decorators and art consultants throughout the United States for over 20 years." So... wall decor.

    https://www.scolaristudio.com/index.html#home

    Debora
     
    mirana likes this.
  14. Boland

    Boland Well-Known Member

    F235373E-2532-4537-808F-D4D60BDE6C01.jpeg 0380F436-A2EC-407E-AE83-0B2B805BB3A6.jpeg 8B9EF544-6E41-408B-98A6-B1959CE35FB1.jpeg 48AE5B43-BFDC-401A-975F-3AA2118E94E3.jpeg Nicely framed. Pity there’s some minor damage and a pity it’s not signed. I really like it and the more unconventional colours used.
     
  15. Debora

    Debora Well-Known Member

    Like it too. Have you opened up the back?

    Debora
     
    Boland likes this.
  16. verybrad

    verybrad Well-Known Member

    Nice... What is the medium?
     
    Boland likes this.
  17. Boland

    Boland Well-Known Member

    Thanks Debora. No not yet
     
  18. Boland

    Boland Well-Known Member

    3C317453-CD40-43E3-A709-9982BDA8B0ED.jpeg ADE79544-0B01-4958-B1B7-FE5E8E8A3CDC.jpeg BB073CC7-E54B-42BB-8853-E00B5E13E260.jpeg
    Thanks. To be honest I wasn’t sure. Was wondering if it was perhaps a mixed medium (the grass) But I decided it was Acrylic? Would you agree?
     
  19. mirana

    mirana Well-Known Member

    It is very thinned so I would guess tempera or thinned acrylic. Too much water gives you those bubbles you see in the last photo, in the blue-gray.
     
    Boland likes this.
  20. Boland

    Boland Well-Known Member

    Hi Mirana,many thanks for the reply. That’s very interesting information. Good to know and learn.

    What do you think about the skill level of the artist? Definitely someone with formal training but maybe still learning?
     
    Last edited: Dec 2, 2023
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