Kay Sage PRICE CHARTS
1898 Albany, New York - 1963 Woodbury, Connecticut. Known for: Surreal, symbolist and dream image painting, sculpture.
Exhibition Review, . "Los Angeles County Museum on Fire: Kay Sage, Painter of an Odd Future". April 30, 2012 by William Poundstone . Consider Kay Sage (1898-1963) the anti-Thomas Kinkade. She was... Read full biography
Exhibition Review, . "Los Angeles County Museum on Fire: Kay Sage, Painter of an Odd Future". April 30, 2012 by William Poundstone . Consider Kay Sage (1898-1963) the anti-Thomas Kinkade. She was America’s great painter of menace, dread, and the post-apocalyptic future. Her trademark was “the... Read full biography
Exhibition Review, . "Los Angeles County Museum on Fire: Kay Sage, Painter of an Odd Future". April 30, 2012 by William Poundstone . Consider Kay Sage (1898-1963) the anti-Thomas Kinkade. She was America’s great painter of menace, dread, and the post-apocalyptic future. Her trademark was “the sulphurous light before a thunderstorm,” observed biographer Régine Tessier. Like a thunderstorm, Sage’s art could be depressing and exhilarating. A true contrarian might nominate Sage as the best of all... Read full biography
Exhibition Review, . "Los Angeles County Museum on Fire: Kay Sage, Painter of an Odd Future". April 30, 2012 by William Poundstone . Consider Kay Sage (1898-1963) the anti-Thomas Kinkade. She was America’s great painter of menace, dread, and the post-apocalyptic future. Her trademark was “the sulphurous light before a thunderstorm,” observed biographer Régine Tessier. Like a thunderstorm, Sage’s art could be depressing and exhilarating. A true contrarian might nominate Sage as the best of all the Western Hemisphere surrealists. Frida, move over? . Born in Albany, Sage had one of her first gallery shows in Los Angeles, at the Tone Price gallery in 1940. Despite that, no Sage paintings have made their way into local museum collections.... Read full biography
Exhibition Review, . "Los Angeles County Museum on Fire: Kay Sage, Painter of an Odd Future". April 30, 2012 by William Poundstone . Consider Kay Sage (1898-1963) the anti-Thomas Kinkade. She was America’s great painter of menace, dread, and the post-apocalyptic future. Her trademark was “the sulphurous light before a thunderstorm,” observed biographer Régine Tessier. Like a thunderstorm, Sage’s art could be depressing and exhilarating. A true contrarian might nominate Sage as the best of all the Western Hemisphere surrealists. Frida, move over? . Born in Albany, Sage had one of her first gallery shows in Los Angeles, at the Tone Price gallery in 1940. Despite that, no Sage paintings have made their way into local museum collections. That’s remedied temporarily by LACMA’s “In Wonderland: The Surrealist Adventures of Women Artists in Mexico and the United... Read full biography
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