Addison Rowe Gallery
Santa Fe

Works Available By
- Mary Abbott
- Clinton Adams
- Milton Avery
- Thomas Duncan Benrimo
- Oscar Edmund Berninghaus
- Janice Biala
- Emil James Bisttram
- Ilya Bolotowsky
- Lawrence Calcagno
- Gerald Cassidy
- Howard Norton Cook
- Andrew Michael Dasburg
- Stuart Davis
- Richard Diebenkorn
- Jim Dine
- Werner Drewes
- Lilly Fenichel
- Sam Francis
- Ed Garman
- Sonia Gechtoff
- Frederick Hammersley
- Angela Heisch
- Sheila Isham
- Raymond Jonson
- Elaine de Kooning
- Albert H. Krehbiel
- Barbara Latham
- Janet Lippincott
- John Ward Lockwood
- William Lumpkins
- Beatrice Mandelman
- John Marin
- Agnes Martin
- Mimi Chen Ting
- Dorothy Morang
- Forrest Moses
- Elie Nadelman
- Kenneth Noland
- Bror Julius Olsson Nordfeldt
- Georgia O'Keeffe
- Agnes Pelton
- Florence Pierce
- Jane Piper
- Louis Ribak
- Rolph Scarlett
- Howard Schleeter
- Fritz Scholder
- William Samuel Schwartz
- Joseph Henry Sharp
- Charles Green Shaw
- Leon Polk Smith
- Vivian Springford
- Joseph Stella
- Irene Monat Stern
- Earl Stroh
- Michio Takayama
- Wayne Thiebaud
- Stuart Walker
- Max Weber
Richard Diebenkorn
(American, 1922 – 1993)
Richard Diebenkorn was an influential 20th-century American painter whose work was comprised of distinct aesthetic periods. Considered a quintessentially Californian artist, he is best remembered as a founding member of the Bay Area Figurative Movement, along with David Park and Elmer Bischoff. “All paintings start out of a mood, out of a relationship with things or people, out of a complete visual impression,” he once explained. Born on April 22, 1922 in Portland, OR, he grew up in San Francisco and went on to study art history at Stanford University. Attracted by the works of Edward Hopper and Willem de Kooning, he first painted in realist style during the early 1940s, then in the gestural manner of Abstract Expressionism...
