Art Linares Clown

$50.00

Art Linares was a prolific but mysterious outsider artist, working in the San Francisco Bay Area in the 1940s - 1950s. He usually signed his work “Senaril” (Linares backwards). His favorite motifs included clowns and other carnival types, religious figures, and street characters. He made a lot of strange allegorical works, such as Jesus on the cross, surrounded by military jets and missiles. Another series featured a sad clown, with two women kissing in the background (probably a story there!). In 2012, hundreds of his paintings and drawings were discovered in a house in Half Moon Bay, California, and distributed to the four winds.

18.5” x 22” Watercolor and tempera on paper.

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Art Linares was a prolific but mysterious outsider artist, working in the San Francisco Bay Area in the 1940s - 1950s. He usually signed his work “Senaril” (Linares backwards). His favorite motifs included clowns and other carnival types, religious figures, and street characters. He made a lot of strange allegorical works, such as Jesus on the cross, surrounded by military jets and missiles. Another series featured a sad clown, with two women kissing in the background (probably a story there!). In 2012, hundreds of his paintings and drawings were discovered in a house in Half Moon Bay, California, and distributed to the four winds.

18.5” x 22” Watercolor and tempera on paper.

Art Linares was a prolific but mysterious outsider artist, working in the San Francisco Bay Area in the 1940s - 1950s. He usually signed his work “Senaril” (Linares backwards). His favorite motifs included clowns and other carnival types, religious figures, and street characters. He made a lot of strange allegorical works, such as Jesus on the cross, surrounded by military jets and missiles. Another series featured a sad clown, with two women kissing in the background (probably a story there!). In 2012, hundreds of his paintings and drawings were discovered in a house in Half Moon Bay, California, and distributed to the four winds.

18.5” x 22” Watercolor and tempera on paper.