
The entire life of Amalia Schulthess has been tied up in art. The piece is signed and dated with red ink. As the title suggests "Something going on inside". This unique drawing by painter/sculptor Amalia Schulthess features large black ink curves surrounding semi-abstract characters. In the late 1930s, Pappe and Goodspeed opened a studio and gallery in the silver mining.
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Upon graduation, the Hungarian Society awarded him a full scholarship to attend the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, where he studied under Daniel Garber and Hugh Breckinridge. He died in 1998.įollowing grade school, Pappe first enrolled at the Cleveland School of Art (not the Cleveland Institute of Art) from 1921 to 1925. Painter, sculptor, and printmaker Carl Lewis Pappe was born in Hungary in 1900. Th abstract is signed by the artist at the lower right and dated 1989. It adds a sense of wonder to the general feeling of the artwork. Some forms have been left almost blank, because the artist added small red circles or ovals, suggesting some kind of mysterious gates to another dimension.

The crossing of these black lines creates a large variety of geometric forms. The overall impression is of a colorful overlap of shapes of different sizes thanks to curvy black lines. Nahuatl art inspired this multicolor geometric abstract by artist Carl Lewis Pappe. His works can be seen at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Denver Museum, the University of Minnesota, the Santa Barbara Museum, and the International Business Machines.

Some of Loran's many exhibitions included the Minnesota State Fair in 1924 the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, in 1933 the Rockefeller Center, in 1935 Oakland Art Gallery, in 1936-1946 the San Francisco Art Museum annuals in 1936 the Golden Gate International Exposition of 1939 California Palace of the Legion of Honor, 1945 California Watercolor Society, 1947, among many others. His early paintings include lyrical abstractions in primary colors however, his style has constantly changed with the times. This exposure influenced Loran's life, where he saw the works of Picasso and other European modernists. His talent was recognized when he won the Paris Prize in 1926, which provided him the benefit of a traveling scholarship to Europe, where he lived in the studio of Paul Cézanne. His landscapes, often including a building or structure, were clean, fresh, and spontaneous. Watercolor and pastels were Loran's medium of choice because they dried fast and were lighter to transport to his often-remote outside locations, such as the ghost towns of California and Nevada. The contrast between the warm colors of the mountain and the calm and serene nature around recalls the balance between the forces of nature.

The background combines what seems to be purple smoke with a very light grey sky. The artwork features a red-orange mountain surrounded by rocky slopes and lush trees. Framed pastel and ink colorful landscape by artist Erle Loran.
