Michael Collins

"Pontiff Piping" Abstract Contemporary Black and Red Toned Painting 1995

SOLD

Material

Oil

About

Abstract contemporary black and red toned painting titled "Pontiff Piping" by Texas artist Michael Roque Collins. This painting was made during a time in which many of his pieces evoked themes of Rome and religion. The piece is displayed floating behind glass in a wooden frame. Signed, titled, and dated on the back of the frame.

Artist Biography

Born in Texas in 1955, Collins earned a BFA from the University of Houston in 1978 and later earned an MFA in painting from Southern Methodist University. Since the mid-1970s he has directed the Lowell Collins School of Art in Houston; he has also held positions on the art faculties of several universities. Michael Roque Collins is a figurative expressionist painter who creates oil-on-linen and mixed-media paintings with thick paint and bold lines. Layering and slicing with his brush and palette knife, he has metaphorical and symbolical themes, especially those of regeneration and renewal. Collins acknowledges a variety of influences, including Max Beckmann, Charles Burchfield and the Hudson River School. Early art objects collected by his father gave him early exposure to strong and direct expressions of the supernatural within the natural environment of daily life. Though these influences were important to the developing foundations of his art, he strives for a distinctive style linked to his personal conception of light, value, color and lines and to ideas from dreams, revealing visions of the conscious and unconscious mind.

Dimensions With Frame

H 14 in. x W 14 in. x D 1.25 in.

Dimensions Without Frame

H 5 in. x W 5 in.