Skip to main content

Craig Kauffman Paintings

American, 1932-2010

Robert Craig Kauffman was born on March 31, 1932, in Los Angeles. He started painting regularly at age seven and went to the University of Southern California to study architecture in 1950. But art soon won out over architecture and he transferred to the University of California Los Angeles, to study painting. He earned Bachelor's and Master's degrees there. A breakthrough came in the early 1960s, when he experimented with painting on glass, but found it too fragile. He then painted on flat acrylic plastic. His next inspiration came from the plastic packaging increasingly used to wrap merchandise. He sought out craftsmen at commercial factories to learn the technique, Time magazine reported in 1968. The results were several series of three-dimensional wall hangings. Some were inspired by large plastic fruit clusters on the wall of a doughnut shop he frequented in Los Angeles. These lozenge-shaped reliefs were sometimes called "bubbles." Barbara Rose, in a catalog essay for an exhibition at the Washington Gallery of Modern Art in 1967, wrote, "Shaping the brittle sheet plastic into a series of voluptuous curves, Kauffman achieves a kind of abstract eroticism that is purely visual." Mr. Kauffman's work was shown in countless exhibitions and many one-man shows. It has been acquired by the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Tate Modern in London, the Art Institute of Chicago and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, among others. In 2006, one of Mr. Kauffman's reliefs fell from a wall of the Georges Pompidou Center in Paris, where it was part of an exhibition titled "Los Angeles: Birth of an Art Capital, 1955–85." It shattered. After storms of publicity, the Pompidou provided technical help and money to make a new version. Mr. Kauffman was married several times. He is survived by his daughters from his marriage to Dana Kauffman, from whom he was separated: Wilhelmina, Vida Rose and Georgia Kauffman. When they started in the 1960s, he and his artistic compatriots did not foresee a legacy, much less earning an income, Larry Bell, a prominent artist in the group, said in an interview on Wednesday. "The troops sort of banded together to be our audience," he said. "Every once in a while, we'd sell something and have a party."

to
1
1
1
1
Overall Height
to
Overall Width
to
1
1
1
1
864
658
649
610
1
1
1
1
1
Artist: Craig Kauffman
Phantom - Red, Yellow, Black, Green, White, Blue, Magenta & Ochre - 10 Feet Tall
By Craig Kauffman
Located in Rancho Santa Fe, CA
A wonderful, museum caliber painting by Craig Kauffman. Initialed "CK" and dated "82" in the lower right corner. PROVENANCE: Asher Faure Gallery Luther Vandross Luther Vandross Estate Private Collection, New York Private Collection, San Diego, CA EXHIBITED: Asher Faure Gallery, Los Angeles, California, CRAIG KAUFFMAN: NEW PAINTINGS April 23 through May 21,1983 CATALOGUE: Craig Kauffman Estate Archive Number CR No: P.1982.2 The following is from The New York Times, May 15, 2010, By Douglas Martin Craig Kauffman, who in the 1960s helped put Los Angeles on the art map with audacious experiments in molding industrial plastic to create ethereal wall-mounted sculptures — some resembling giant pieces of jelly candy — died Sunday in Angeles City in the Philippines. He was 78. The cause was complications of pneumonia following a recent stroke, said Frank Lloyd, his friend and dealer. Mr. Kauffman was eminent in an eclectic group of artists who reveled in the light, space and energy of postwar Southern California to forge new Minimalist, often glossy artistic approaches. Richard Armstrong, director of the Guggenheim Museum said that these Californians, sometimes called the Cool School — along with Chicago Imagists and Washington, D.C., painters called the Color School — were counterpoints to the Abstract Expressionists who ruled New York. "California was never ashamed of being a new society," Mr. Armstrong said in an interview on Thursday, "it all fit together nicely." Los Angeles was then ascending to the status of a metropolis, with a growing number of major-league sports teams, fresh industries and a surging population. There were new quarters for public galleries and the burgeoning of commercial ones. At the center of the action was the Ferus Gallery, which staged the first solo exhibition of Andy's Warhol's pop art and the first American retrospective of Marcel Duchamp. Mr. Kauffman was a featured artist at the gallery's inaugural exhibition in 1957, "Objects on the New Landscape Demanding of the Eye." Peter Plagens, in his book Sunshine Muse: Art on the West Coast, 1945-1970, (1974, 1999), wrote, "'Culture' meant 'art' and 'art' implied 'new,' and 'new,' as everybody was informed, meant California — particularly Los Angeles." The artists who seized this historic opportunity included Billy Al Bengston, Ken Price and Robert Irwin, among others. In an interview on Wednesday, Arne Glimcher, founder and chairman of Pace Gallery, which had Mr. Kauffman's first New York show in 1967, called the California scene in the late '50s and early '60s "a pressure cooker of ideas." Referring to artistic styles, he said, "It was California perfection against New York messiness." Mr. Kauffman's early paintings were critical in defining this new style. Mr. Plagens called them "the first evidence of a Los Angeles sensibility." Mr. Kauffman's later work blazed splashier trails, as he experimented with the effects of light on works that were painterly yet three-dimensional. "The true power of what he did was his incorporation and then redirection of light inside sculpture," said Mr. Armstrong, who was the curator of a show of Mr. Kauffman's work at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1987. "Many of them glowed," he said. "Others were translucent. Even the supposedly opaque had a noteworthy shimmering quality to them." What Mr. Kauffman made reflected a wide range of inspirations. In a 2008 video interview in conjunction with a show at the Armory Center for the Arts in Pasadena California, he said that the famed lingerie store Frederick's of Hollywood provided artistic nurture. With a smile, he confessed to a "shoe fetish" that had influenced some of his art. Robert Craig Kauffman was born on March 31, 1932, in Los Angeles. He started painting regularly at age 7 and went to theUniversity of Southern California to study architecture in 1950. But art soon won out over architecture, and he transferred to the University of California Los Angeles, to study painting. He earned Bachelor's and Master's degrees there. A breakthrough came in the early 1960s when he experimented with painting on glass, but found it too fragile. He then painted on flat acrylic plastic. His next inspiration came from the plastic packaging increasingly used to wrap merchandise. He sought out craftsmen at commercial factories to learn the technique, Time magazine reported in 1968. The results were several series of three-dimensional wall hangings. Some were inspired by large plastic fruit clusters on the wall of a doughnut shop he frequented in Los Angeles. These lozenge-shaped reliefs were sometimes called "bubbles." Barbara Rose, in a catalog essay for an exhibition at the Washington Gallery of Modern Art in 1967, wrote, "Shaping the brittle sheet plastic into a series of voluptuous curves, Kauffman achieves a kind of abstract eroticism that is purely visual." Mr. Kauffman's work was shown in countless exhibitions and many one-man shows. It has been acquired by the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Tate Modern in London, the Art Institute of Chicago and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, among others. In 2006, one of Mr. Kauffman's reliefs fell from a wall of the Georges Pompidou Center in Paris, where it was part of an exhibition titled "Los Angeles: Birth of an Art Capital, 1955-1985." It shattered. After storms of publicity, the Pompidou provided technical help and money to make a new version. Mr. Kauffman was married several times. He is survived by his daughters from his marriage to Dana Kauffman, from whom he was separated: Wilhelmina, Vida Rose and Georgia Kauffman. When they started in the 1960s, Mr. Kauffman and his artistic compatriots did not foresee a legacy, much less earning an income, Larry Bell, a prominent artist in the group, said in an interview on Wednesday. "The troops sort of banded together to be our own audience," he said. "Every once in a while, we'd sell...
Category

1980s Abstract Craig Kauffman Paintings

Materials

Silk, Oil Crayon, Acrylic

Related Items
"Ghost of the Gardens" (green, floral, vibrant, energetic, abstract landscapes)
By Nicholas Evans
Located in Paris, IDF
"Ghosts of the Gardens" is a mysterious and captivating abstract painting, evoking the untamed beauty of wild gardens and chaotic floral motifs with its energetic and loose movement....
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Craig Kauffman Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil Crayon, Oil Pastel, Oil, Acrylic

Tuscany Meadow with Long Evening Shadows, Flowers, Summer Evening, Abstract
By Elaine Kazimierczuk
Located in Deddington, GB
A meadow in Tuscany on a summer's evening at my friend's house, near Sestina. The heat of the day has left a balmy warmth and the low sun is casting long deep shadows across the wild...
Category

2010s Abstract Craig Kauffman Paintings

Materials

Oil Crayon, Oil, Acrylic, Canvas, Mixed Media

"It's Not True" (abstract, surreal, dark, black, gold, leopard, canvas painting)
By Nicholas Evans
Located in Paris, IDF
IT'S NOT TRUE 2022 Paris, France Primarily matte and satin finish black paint, mixed with plaster and oil stick on canvas. An abstract and surreal painting with accents of pinks, reds, purples, and gold. A very faint profile of a leopard walking into the darkness is situated on the lower left side of the canvas. In the upper right "MDCCCXCIV" (1894) is hand painted in gold serif font. Vertical movement is incorporated through the use of subtle colors. Evans Deventer...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Craig Kauffman Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Acrylic, Oil Crayon

"Deep end" Textured Mixed Media Collage Abstract Floral Painting on Canvas, 2021
Located in Mantova, MN
Contemporary mixed media (acrylic, pastel, pencil, and collage) abstract floral painting by emerging artist Federica Aiello Pini, exploring nature...
Category

2010s Abstract Expressionist Craig Kauffman Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Paper, Conté, Oil Crayon, Pastel, Cotton Canvas, Mixed Media, Ac...

Traduit La Nuit framed 54x38 acrylic oil stick and fabric
By Christophe
Located in Southampton, NY
An impressive abstract expressionist painting by Christophe measuring 54"x38" framed.. There is an excitement in the art world when you find the artist that is going to be the next ...
Category

2010s Abstract Expressionist Craig Kauffman Paintings

Materials

Fabric, Oil Crayon, Acrylic

"Floruit" (abstract green, pink, floral, landscape, oil painting, cotton canvas)
By Nicholas Evans
Located in Paris, IDF
FLORUIT 2024 Paris, France This complex and layered floral painting of an abstract vase of flowers presents an energetic and mesmerizing subject. This original painting on cotton ca...
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Craig Kauffman Paintings

Materials

Oil, Dye, Ink, Oil Crayon, Cotton Canvas, Acrylic

"Four Harpoons" (Abstract, Bold, Neutral, Black Painting on Wood; 50cm x 30cm)
By Nicholas Evans
Located in Paris, IDF
FOUR HARPOONS 2021 Paris, France "Four Harpoons" (Abstract, Bold, Neutral, Black Painting on Wood; 50cm x 30cm) Abstract painting. Neutral color palette of black and white on wood....
Category

21st Century and Contemporary Abstract Craig Kauffman Paintings

Materials

Wood, Paint, Oil Crayon, Acrylic

Retracing Steps
By Katherine Bello
Located in Kansas City, MO
Katherine Bello Title: Retracing Steps Medium: mixed media on canvas Year: 2020 Size: 36" x 24" x 1.5" Signed, dated and inscribed by hand COA provided (issued by representing gallery) Katherine Bello's aim as an artist is to capture a sense of place, a moment of time, or a feeling - to evoke a sense of wonder. Bello loves paint and paint brushes; bold, gestural mark-making and the interplay of color. She is influenced by light and landscape, poetry, history and science. Formerly educated in Chemical Engineering and Interior Design, Bello is drawn to the process of creating Something out of Nothing. Abstract, sbstract art...
Category

2010s Abstract Expressionist Craig Kauffman Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Varnish, Oil Crayon, Acrylic

Retracing Steps
Retracing Steps
H 36 in W 24 in D 1.5 in
"Ice Coring" Acrylic, Oil Stick, Fabric and Collage 54x38 framed
By Christophe
Located in Southampton, NY
We are pleased to be the gallery that represents the paintings of French abstract artist Christophe in the United States. Another impressive painting from 2019 by abstract expressi...
Category

2010s Abstract Craig Kauffman Paintings

Materials

Fabric, Paper, Oil Crayon, Acrylic

'Show Me the Money: Ultra Luxury Edition, ' by XVALA, Mixed Media Painting
By XVALA
Located in Oklahoma City, OK
This large 119" x 72" mixed media painting by the artist, XVALA, is from his series 'Pandemic Collection: 8' and depicts bright colorful cartoon chara...
Category

2010s Abstract Expressionist Craig Kauffman Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Mixed Media, Acrylic, Oil Crayon, Screen

Delight (Abstract Painting)
Located in London, GB
Delight (Abstract Painting) Acrylic, spray paint, oil stick on canvas - Unframed Ludovic Dervillez is a French abstract painter. His work explores...
Category

2010s Abstract Craig Kauffman Paintings

Materials

Canvas, Oil Crayon, Spray Paint, Acrylic

"Summer Rain", Acrylic paint and Fabric framed, 50x34
By Christophe
Located in Southampton, NY
Listed is another impressive painting from 2018 by French abstract expressionist Christophe. We are pleased to announce that we are the only galle...
Category

2010s Abstract Craig Kauffman Paintings

Materials

Fabric, Oil Crayon, Acrylic

Craig Kauffman paintings for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Craig Kauffman paintings available for sale on 1stDibs. You can also browse by medium to find art by Craig Kauffman in acrylic paint, crayon, fabric and more. Much of the original work by this artist or collective was created during the 1980s and is mostly associated with the abstract style. Not every interior allows for large Craig Kauffman paintings, so small editions measuring 58 inches across are available. Customers who are interested in this artist might also find the work of Larry Poons, Richard Anuszkiewicz, and Stanley Boxer. Craig Kauffman paintings prices can differ depending upon medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $150,000 and tops out at $150,000, while the average work can sell for $150,000.

Recently Viewed

View All