Robert Stark Jr. Oil on Canvas "Three Catboats Rounding Brant Point, Nantucket"
Robert Stark Jr. Oil on Canvas "Three Catboats Rounding Brant Point, Nantucket"
Robert Stark Jr. Oil on Canvas "Three Catboats Rounding Brant Point, Nantucket"
Robert Stark Jr. Oil on Canvas "Three Catboats Rounding Brant Point, Nantucket"
Robert Stark Jr. Oil on Canvas "Three Catboats Rounding Brant Point, Nantucket"
Robert Stark Jr. Oil on Canvas "Three Catboats Rounding Brant Point, Nantucket"
Robert Stark Jr. Oil on Canvas "Three Catboats Rounding Brant Point, Nantucket"
Robert Stark Jr. Oil on Canvas "Three Catboats Rounding Brant Point, Nantucket"

Robert Stark Jr. Oil on Canvas “Three Catboats Rounding Brant Point, Nantucket”

Winning Bid: $90,000

Robert Stark Jr. Oil on Canvas “Three Catboats Rounding Brant Point, Nantucket”:

Robert Stark Jr. (American 1933-2014) Oil on Canvas “Three Catboats Rounding Brant Point, Nantucket”, signed lower left R. Stark, in star embellished gold leaf frame

23.5 in. x 53.5 in. Framed 31.5 in. x 61.5 in.

Robert Stark Jr.’s legacy is a modernist approach to American Luminist paintings. Working principally in oil on canvas or panel, he is best known for coastal scenes that feature an iconic, red sailed catboat. Stark’s work is characterized by the use of aerial perspective and a concealment of visible brushstrokes. Through effective use of of light in landscape, his paintings evoke tranquility and calm, inferring poetic intimacy.

Stark attended Nantucket schools and after graduating from high school, served in the US Navy during the Korean War. He was the founder and director of Nantucket’s oldest gallery, the Stark Gallery on Old North Wharf.

His work has been presented in fine galleries in New England and NYC, and is represented in numerous private and corporate collections throughout the US, Canada, Ireland, Great Britain, Germany, France and China. ~ Carolyn Walsh

Condition
Items may have wear and tear, imperfections or the effects of aging. Please contact the gallery for further details prior to bidding. Any condition statement given as a courtesy should not be treated as fact.