Mel Roman: Coming Out Under Fire | SMoCA May 21 – Oct 2, 2016
Art completes a beautiful home like jewelry completes your outfit. Whether a dramatic oil painting, Pop Art print, or framed illustration, art in the home reveals something about you and your style.
If you’re not a Christie’s or Sotheby’s frequent shopper or have a private dealer that you turn to for those fabulous pops of color, works by the likes of Basquiat and Hirst are likely a little out of your reach. Happily, iconic artwork has made its way outside the frame and onto everything from porcelain to wallpaper to deck chairs, thanks to museum shops such as Phoenix Art Museum, Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Heard Museum.
Here are 6 creative ways to incorporate museum-quality art into your home.
From the collection of Phoenix Art Museum!
Is that a wink or a smile? Have a whimsical masterpiece in your home or office and never be late again with this Mona Lisa clock from Phoenix Art Museum, $29.99
From the collection of Phoenix Art Museum!
Start your morning with a hot cup of coffee in Galison’s colorful ceramic mug featuring the Campbell Soup Can imagery made famous by Andy Warhol from Phoenix Art Museum, $14.99
From the collection of Phoenix Art Museum!
This lovely infinity scarf is based on Joseph Stella’s painting, Flowers, Italy. Complete your outfit with this highly decorative, stylized exuberance typical of Stella’s work from Phoenix Art Museum, $24.99
From the collection of Phoenix Art Museum!
The porcelain plate series by Kehinde WIley includes six designs of six different faces — 3 male and 3 female. Start the conversation with a table set in these colorful and vibrant plates from Phoenix Art Museum, $99 per plate.
From the collection of Heard Museum!
“Rain Council” Giclee Print by Margarete Bagshaw (Santa Clara) 3/50 is the perfect print to tie your contemporary home and your love of the southwest from Heard Museum, $400
From the collection of Heard Museum!
Display your holiday bounty in this coiled basket with spider design by Margaret Kootswatewa (Hopi). She still practices the laborious task of harvesting and preparing her own weaving materials from Heard Museum, $600
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