Carolyn Schlam Abstract Postimpressionistic Art STILL LIFE Signed Numbered Litho

Regular price $285.00

Shipping calculated at checkout.

PALM BEACH ESTATE TREASURE Carolyn Schlam Impressionist Art STILL LIFE Signed and Numbered Lithographic print. Beautiful, deep and vibrant colors depicting an abstract, almost cubist tablescape. Framed very simply in soft, sea foam green wood, it measures 23” x 31” overall. Pencil signed lower right and numbered 25/450 lower left. Overall

Condition of the print and frame are excellent with very light scuffing to the frame. No damage. Please ask any and all questions prior to offer or purchase.


We apologize for the high cost of shipping but all of our carriers have raised their rates exorbitantly on items that are oversized and or heavy.



Carolyn Schlam is an award winning American painter, sculptor and glass artist born and raised in New York City. She studied painting with Norman Raeben, youngest son of the Yiddish writer Sholem Alecheim, in Carnegie Hall Studios, glass-making at Urban Glass in Brooklyn and wood sculpture at University of New Mexico/Taos. She currently lives and works in Southern California. Carolyn Schlam’s portraiture is infused with emotional content, expressing the vulnerability and longing of her mostly female subjects. She explores portraiture in its many aspects– traditional, in which appearance and character are foremost; expressionistic, in which the inner life is heightened; and stylized, in which the image becomes iconic. She is known for her use of exuberant color, elegant drawing and modern design. In recent years, she has added embellishments to her painting– decorative papers, found objects and fabrics that bring dimension to this work– they fall into the category of collage and assemblage. Carolyn is also a writer, and she has combined her love of art with her passion for writing in her published books on art, a novel and many periodicals. In 2013, Carolyn was named one of the 48 finalists in the Smithsonian Museum Portrait Competition. Her portrait, “Frances at 103” was exhibited in the National Portrait Gallery for one year and was subsequently acquired by the Museum. It is in the permanent collection of the Smithsonian Museum of African American History and Culture. In 2018, her “Mother and Child” joined the prestigious Cedars Sinai Art Collection and last year she gifted the City of Los Angeles with a feminist collage.