Joseph Demarais
Joseph Demarais was born in 1927 in Hoboken, New Jersey. Known as an innovative printmaker, Demarais made hundreds of prints during his brief career. He pushed the limits of printmaking using copper, zinc, masonite and acetate to achieve textural surfaces. During his seven-year career as a printmaker, his three-dimensional impression created on handmade paper was exhibited in more than 100 galleries and museums in the United States and Europe. The director and founder of the International Print Society, Franz Geierhaas, published The Graphic Works of Joseph Demarais: A Catalogue Raisonné, detailing his life and work. Demarais passed away from heart complications in 1971, at the age of 44. His work is in the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
Mid-20th Century North American Modern Joseph Demarais
Acrylic, Wood, Masonite
2010s American Joseph Demarais
Paper
20th Century Italian Joseph Demarais
Paper
1980s American Modern Vintage Joseph Demarais
Paper
2010s American Joseph Demarais
Paper
Early 20th Century Italian Belle Époque Joseph Demarais
Brass
2010s American Joseph Demarais
Paper
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Modern Joseph Demarais
Wood, Paper
2010s American Joseph Demarais
Paper
2010s American Joseph Demarais
Paper
2010s American Joseph Demarais
Paper
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Modern Joseph Demarais
Wood, Paper
21st Century and Contemporary Italian Modern Joseph Demarais
Wood, Paper
Mid-20th Century North American Mid-Century Modern Joseph Demarais
Acrylic, Wood, Masonite
Late 20th Century Mid-Century Modern Joseph Demarais
Glass, Wood, Paper
1960s American Modern Vintage Joseph Demarais
Metal
1960s American Modern Vintage Joseph Demarais
Wood, Paint