This volume presents a study of American abstract artist Frank Stella (b. 1936), surveying his career from the famous Black Paintings of the late 1950s up to the present. This book begins with the celebrated Black Paintings of 1959, moves on through the Minimalist Copper and Aluminium paintings of the early Sixties, to the exuberant Protractor series, the expansion into three dimensions in the 1970s, and closing with the 3-dimensional Polish Village, Exotic Birds and Brazilian 'maximalist' works of the 1980s and 1990s.
John Moore, Uncommon Vistas: Urban, Suburban and Industrial Views
Frank Stella's paintings are lean, but leanness does not necessarily mean unfeelingness. This is the problem that monochrome painting creates, and Minimal art in general.
"Revelation describes the viewer's experience of seeing more than thirty major paintings by Jules Olitski together all at once--a new and illuminating look at nearly fifty years of the Russian-born artist's productivity." --Préf.
Robert Andrew Parker
1984 1978 Spends first winter in Florida on Casey Key , Nokomis . His memoir , A Not - So - Still Life , dealing with his youth and early years in America , is published by St. Martin's Press / Marek , New York .
Martin Johnson Heade (1819-1904) had the longest career and produced perhaps the most varied body of work of any American painter of the nineteenth century.
This book features 11 paintings by Pollock selected from MoMA's substantial collection of his work.
Masterpieces of American Painting from the Brooklyn Museum
The first to capture the full range of [Stuart Davis'] remarkable career, from the Armory Show of 1913 to his las brilliant works of the 1960s.
Kikuo Saito: Recent Paintings