This Robert Broderson painting is a one-of-a-kind piece that showcases his unique artistic style. This smaller-sized paper painting features a figure of a young lady a bit reminiscent of Pablo Picasso’s Blue Period. The piece is a perfect blend of surrealism, tonalism, contemporary art, expressionism, figurative art, abstract, and experimental styles, making it a true avant-garde work.


This original piece is perfect for any art collector or enthusiast who appreciates unique and innovative artwork. Add this to your collection today!


The work measures approximately 12x19 inches.


Robert Broderson was born July 6, 1920 in West Haven, Connecticut. He died in Independence, Virginia on March 12, 1992. He began painting as an older student attending Duke University on the G.I. Bill after World War II. After he graduated from Duke in 1950, he continued painting and studied printmaking with Mauricio Lasansky at the State University of Iowa, where he received an M.F.A. in 1952. Broderson then returned to Duke where he taught classes in drawing and painting for twelve years and became an Associate Professor of Art. He left Duke in 1964 after receiving a Guggenheim Fellowship. Broderson also taught at North Carolina State in Raleigh in 1967-68, and at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine during the summer of 1967. After the sixties, Broderson gave up teaching and devoted all his life to painting.


We believe the work to be watercolor. The work is on very thin type paper. It will be mailed on a supportive archival backing and taped in place for shipping.


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We offer a 60 day return policy.