Sara Sole Ferguson was raised in New Orleans and worked as a mathematician before deciding to move to New York to become an artist. She gained widespread recognition with her various portraits of... Read full biography
Sara Sole Ferguson was raised in New Orleans and worked as a mathematician before deciding to move to New York to become an artist. She gained widespread recognition with her various portraits of Hillary Clinton, many times superimposed onto different iconic images and celebrity bodies such as... Read full biography
Sara Sole Ferguson was raised in New Orleans and worked as a mathematician before deciding to move to New York to become an artist. She gained widespread recognition with her various portraits of Hillary Clinton, many times superimposed onto different iconic images and celebrity bodies such as Marilyn Monroe, Elizabeth Taylor and various nineteenth century American presidents. One of her canvases depicts the bride of Frankenstein, iconic imagery borrowed from the 1935 film. The painting was... Read full biography
Sara Sole Ferguson was raised in New Orleans and worked as a mathematician before deciding to move to New York to become an artist. She gained widespread recognition with her various portraits of Hillary Clinton, many times superimposed onto different iconic images and celebrity bodies such as Marilyn Monroe, Elizabeth Taylor and various nineteenth century American presidents. One of her canvases depicts the bride of Frankenstein, iconic imagery borrowed from the 1935 film. The painting was exhibited in her 2013 exhibition “E Pluribus Unum” at Coup d’oeil Art Consortium and showed alongside an interesting array of characters, including politicians like Hillary Clinton and actors such Boris Karloff of the 1932 film The Mummy. The... Read full biography
Sara Sole Ferguson was raised in New Orleans and worked as a mathematician before deciding to move to New York to become an artist. She gained widespread recognition with her various portraits of Hillary Clinton, many times superimposed onto different iconic images and celebrity bodies such as Marilyn Monroe, Elizabeth Taylor and various nineteenth century American presidents. One of her canvases depicts the bride of Frankenstein, iconic imagery borrowed from the 1935 film. The painting was exhibited in her 2013 exhibition “E Pluribus Unum” at Coup d’oeil Art Consortium and showed alongside an interesting array of characters, including politicians like Hillary Clinton and actors such Boris Karloff of the 1932 film The Mummy. The juxtaposition of the political with the pop and the underlying connotation is where the meaning of her work lies. She handles popular imagery wit... Read full biography
Sarah Sole Ferguson - Art Prices in Auction LotsAuction Lots