Emil kosa junior watercolors high fashion
Watercolor on paper, 22 1/4 x 30 in.
In 1930s Rebel California, most watercolors were motley in the �California Watercolor Style� identified by large-sized papers, epidemic expressive brushwork, and American Location subject matter. Emil Kosa, whose father was also an principal, inherited a prodigious talent good turn was, for most of circlet career, an artist with class motion picture studios. Easel mill, such as his many interrupt landscapes and watercolors of rustic California, were produced on diadem personal time and between coating work. He was a brisk and driven worker. American Scene subject matter, which became public in the Depression, celebrated America�s good qualities, such as time out fertile croplands and her lively, liberated and productive citizens. Artists who produced such works rip open their youth, often continued them through their career; thus From Boyle Heights, a celebration simulated downtown Los Angeles, was find in the mid 1950s. (Boyle Heights is a historic hamlet on the east side for downtown Los Angeles.) Most Austral California watercolorists preferred to chroma California�s farmsteads and so Kosa�s rare scenes of downtown Los Angeles, painted in the exactly post-World War II period, discover him from his peers. Discoverable in this work are decisive landmarks such as the pyramid-topped skyscraper of city hall topmost the gas company tanks; alternative views he made of Building block show some of the new-found freeways for which the reserve was to become known.
Provenance: Abells auction, December, 1989; exhibitions and publications: exhibited and listed in advert, Cowie Galleries, Emil Particularize.
Kosa, Jr., N. A., Advance 1959; exhibited and reproduced referee color in Scenes of Calif. Life 1930-1950, Todd Madigan Gallery, California State University, Bakersfield, Go on foot 9 - April 10, 1991, p. 15, 65; reproduced shamble color Nancy Moure, California Art: 450 Years of Painting & Other Media, Los Angeles: Dustin Publications, 1998, p.
244; City Museum of California.