The Noyes Museum of Art: Online Collection
Fred Winslow Noyes, Jr., Fish Swirls, n.d., acrylic on paper
Fred Winslow Noyes, Jr.
American (1905 – 1987)
Artist, successful entrepreneur and ardent collector of art, antiques and folk art, Fred Noyes was, along with his wife Ethel, the founder of The Noyes Museum of Art. As an artist, he was inspired by the waterways and wildlife of rural New Jersey.
Janet Sullivan Turner, Icon Series #36/Roulette Wheel, mixed media
Janet Sullivan Turner
American, Born 1935
Revision is at the heart of Janet Sullivan Turner’s assemblages, bridging the gap between past, present, and future.
René Margotton, La Roue des Mers, oil painting
René Margotton
French (1915 – 2009)
René Margotton was a painter, born in 1915 in Roanne, France. He is known as one of the last Cubists of the 20th century.
Lavett Ballard, Greenbook Diaries, mixed media, collage on fence panel
Lavett Ballard
American
Ballard’s work consists of a collage – painted, destroyed and reborn to create a reimagined visual narrative to the African American history portrayed.
Fred Staloff, Fundy, New England, painting
Fred Staloff
American, (1924 – 2019)
New Jersey-born artist, Fred Staloff, pursued a career in the arts after fighting in World War II.
Charles Hewitt, Ace, 2000, Lithograph
Charles Hewitt
American, Born 1946
An American post-war, contemporary artist, Charles Hewitt is a painter, print-maker, and sculptor.
Robert R. Anderson, Western Story, acrylic on canvas
Robert R. Anderson
American (1946 – 2010)
Robert R. Anderson’s body of work pays homage to classic pulp fiction images that became popular in post-war culture known as Pulp Americana.
Hak Vogrin, New World Order, oil painting
Hak Vogrin
American, (1920 – 2009)
Predominantly a self-taught, “outsider artist,” Hak Vogrin was a part of the ‘60s and ‘70s underground “comix” movement.
Alan Willoughby, Truth to Power, Double Wall, White stoneware clay
Alan Willoughby
American
Willoughby’s work addresses function and sculptural forms by utilizing wheel thrown and hand-built components with additive and subtractive processes.
Joan Arbeiter, Portrait of Agnes Denes, mixed media on clayboard
Joan Arbeiter
American
Joan Arbeiter is a feminist, painter, author, curator, and educator.
Toshiko Takaezu, 3/4 Moon, glazed stoneware
Toshiko Takaezu
American (1922 – 2011)
Toshiko Takaezu was one of the twentieth century’s greatest ceramic artists. She combined inspiration from her own cultural background with currents from contemporary painting and sculpture, arriving at a unique expressionist idiom.
Anthony Rudisill, Mute Swan, gouache painting
Anthony Rudisill
American, Born 1934
Anthony Rudisill’s career spans nearly sixty years of artistic growth across the disciplines of sculpture and painting with a focus on nature.
Valetta, Tidal Wave, pastel, on 22 panels
Valetta
American
Valetta's visual work has been categorized as figurative abstraction, leaning toward the surreal crammed with symbolism.
Joseph Podlesnik, Phoenix Auto Show, Archival pigment print
Joseph Podlesnik
American
Joseph Podlesnik’s work uses photography as an instrument of visual discovery, to make the familiar unfamiliar by stunting logical perspective space.