"Broken Window"

by Gregory J. Rose
2018, Mixed Media On Panel, 9“x11”, framed

In Private Collection

A compact mixed-media composition built from layered pastel pink, pale blue, gray, and muted red fields, intersected by scraped passages, vertical abrasion, and softened structural breaks. Framed. Certificate of Authenticity included.

 
 

 
 
 

Collector Snapshot

Broken Window is a small-format mixed media work that emphasizes fragmentation and surface disruption rather than contrast-heavy massing. The composition feels partially revealed and partially eroded, with overlapping color fields that appear worn back and reasserted multiple times. It operates as a quieter but structurally complex example of Gregory’s 2018 panel work, where texture, abrasion, and incomplete forms carry the visual weight.

  • Stable Growth

    While this work does not carry exhibition history, it is part of a documented body of 2018 mixed media panels that have demonstrated consistent collector demand and price stability over time. Its confirmed acquisition into a private collection in 2025 supports long-term retention value rather than speculative appreciation, aligning with steady market performance for works of this scale and period.

  • One of One Original

    This is the only version of this artwork. No editions exist.

    This artwork has been acquired and is no longer available.

  • Final Sale Price (2025): $200

  • Acquired in 2025

    This work was purchased in 2025 and placed into a private collection, reflecting active demand for Gregory’s mixed media works.

  • Foundational Collector Tier

    The scale, pricing, and acquisition context position Broken Window as a foundational entry point into Gregory’s mixed media practice. It represents early collector engagement with his material language while maintaining originality, physical presence, and long-term collectability.

 
 

 

Artwork Details

Full Description

The surface is constructed through layered pastel pink and pale blue areas that are repeatedly scraped, thinned, and interrupted, allowing gray and raw panel tones to surface beneath. Vertical abrasions and irregular breaks suggest structural instability, while muted red accents introduce tension without dominating the composition. The result is a work that feels partially dismantled and reassembled, with its visual rhythm driven by interruption rather than symmetry or balance.

 

Provenance

Studio Collection

This artwork has never been exhibited and remained in the artist’s studio collection until its acquisition into a private collection.

 
 

 
 

Market Relevance

Broken Window reflects sustained collector interest in Gregory’s early mixed media panels that prioritize surface wear, layered process, and understated color relationships. Though absent from exhibition circulation, the work’s successful acquisition aligns with broader demand for his 2018 output, particularly among collectors seeking physically resolved, small-format originals that carry the same material logic as his larger panels.

 
 
 

Comparable Sales

Comparable works from Gregory’s 2018 mixed media panel series have consistently transacted within similar price ranges, supporting stable valuation benchmarks for this period and scale.

 
 

Artist Market Position

Gregory’s market position continues to be reinforced through steady placement of early mixed media works into private collections. Broken Window contributes to this pattern by demonstrating that collector demand extends beyond exhibited works to include studio-era panels that clearly articulate his material approach and compositional discipline.

 

Price Growth of Mixed Media Works (2018–2025)

 
 

 

Broken Window operates through erosion rather than assertion.

Instead of presenting a dominant visual anchor, the work allows scraped passages, softened edges, and interrupted fields to define its structure. The pastel tones function as residual layers rather than statements, reinforcing the sense that the image has been worn into place. As a privately collected 2018 panel, it stands as a materially honest example of Gregory’s process during a period where surface and structure were inseparable concerns.”

— Curatorial Commentary

 

 

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