Artwork by Brad Phillips,  Three works: Evangeline Redux, Youth in Asia and Goth Girl with Cigarette

Brad Phillips
Three works: Evangeline Redux, Youth in Asia and Goth Girl with Cigarette

2 acrylic on canvas and 1 watercolour
- “Evangeline Redux” (acrylic on canvas signed, titled, dated 9/2004 and inscribed ‘For Stevie Nicks’ on the reverse, 22 x 28 ins. [55.9 x 71 cms]), unframed;
- “Youth in Asia” (acrylic on canvas, signed, titled and dated 2003 and titled ‘Girl with Pink Flower’ and dated on a gallery label on the reverse, 12 x 12 ins (30.5 x 30.5 cms), unframed;
- “Goth Girl with Cigarette” (watercolour on paper, signed, dated 2003 and inscribed ‘For Julie Anne Stanton on the reverse, 10.5 x 7 ins [26.7 x 17.8 cms]), unframed

22 x 28 ins ( 55.9 x 71.1 cms ) ( largest piece )

Auction Estimate: $700.00$500.00 - $700.00

Price Realized $390.00
Sale date: November 22nd 2022

Provenance:
Greener Pastures Contemporary Art, Toronto
Miriam Shiell Fine Art, Toronto
Private Collection

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Brad Phillips
(1973)

Brad Phillips has held solo exhibitions at Division Gallery, Toronto; Fierman Gallery, New York; Wallspace Gallery, New York; Monte Clark Gallery, Vancouver and Toronto; Residence Gallery, London, UK; Groeflin Maag Galerie, Zurich; Galerie ZK, Berlin; LaMontagne Gallery, Boston; and at the Liste 07 Young Art Fair, Basel. His work has also been included in group exhibitions at the Contemporary Art Gallery, the Museum of Comic and Cartoon Art, the Museum of Contemporary Canadian Art, and in Guy Maddin's “The Keyhole Project” at the Beursschouwburg in Belgium. His work has been shown at Canadian and international art fairs and he was a finalist, representing Western Canada, in the RBC Canadian Painting Competition in 2004. Phillips' works are included in the art collections of the Glenbow Museum, the Capital Group Companies, the Royal Bank of Canada, Hauser & Wirth Collection, and the Toronto philanthropist W. Bruce C. Bailey. In 2017 Phillips was commissioned to create a large-scale painting for the Willis Tower in Chicago (formerly the Sears Tower).