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Espontanéa VII | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by Elisa Gomez Art. Item made of canvas compatible with contemporary and eclectic & maximalism style
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Espontanéa VII | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by Elisa Gomez Art. Item made of canvas compatible with contemporary and eclectic & maximalism style
Espontanéa VII | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by Elisa Gomez Art. Item made of canvas compatible with contemporary and eclectic & maximalism style
Espontanéa VII | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by Elisa Gomez Art. Item made of canvas compatible with contemporary and eclectic & maximalism style
Espontanéa VII | Oil And Acrylic Painting in Paintings by Elisa Gomez Art. Item made of canvas compatible with contemporary and eclectic & maximalism style

Created and Sold by Elisa Gomez Art

Elisa Gomez Art

Espontanéa VII - Paintings

Price $10,000

In Stock Now

Shipping: UPS 7-10 days
Estimated Arrival: December 29, 2024
painting comes as rolled canvas that will need to be stretched professionally

Handmade

Woman Owned

DimensionsWeight
66H x 54W x 1.5D in
167.64H x 137.16W x 3.81D cm
2.27 kg
5 lb

Oil and oil pastel on canvas, abstract Spring floral scene with bold reds, chartreuse, purples, and loads of texture

Item Espontanéa VII
Created by Elisa Gomez Art
As seen in Creator's Studio, Salt Lake City, UT
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Elisa Gomez Art
Meet the Creator
Wescover creator since 2018
Abstract expressionist paintings influenced by my ever changing natural surroundings

“Elisa Gomez received her BFA with an emphasis in painting from the University of Utah in 2010. She has been involved in multiple shows across the country, most notably “Terrain” in San Francisco- a show based on pieces painted while traveling across the Western U.S. for eight months. Primarily in mixed media on canvas, Elisa Gomez wields her materials with the skill of a practiced fine artist while nonetheless composing her canvases with the ease of a studied art historian. Evidenced by a few discernible, well-executed, and discrete operations, her working mode transposes the schema and aesthetic of both European and American Abstract Expressionism with a studied sensitivity particular to her training and practice.”
Elizabeth Miller, Ph. D. UCSD