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Artist: Dieter Roth
Düsseldorf (German Cities) by Dieter Roth monuments vintage postcard light blue
By Dieter Roth
Located in New York, NY
Düsseldorf (German Cities), 1970
24 x 33.8 in. / 61 x 86 cm
Screen print in one color on offset lithograph, black on white card. “for Paul” written in pencil lower middle. Signed and...
Category
1960s Abstract Dieter Roth More Prints
Materials
Lithograph, Screen
A Muse (single print #11) by Dieter Roth abstract black and white lithograph
By Dieter Roth
Located in New York, NY
This abstract black and white Roth print is full of movement, wildly diverse mark making, visceral, three-dimensional shapes and dynamic sketched lines. It is a single print from the...
Category
1970s Abstract Dieter Roth More Prints
Materials
Lithograph
Berlin 2 by Dieter Roth architectural monument postcard in pink of Germany
By Dieter Roth
Located in New York, NY
Berlin 2, 1970
24 x 33.8 in. / 61 x 86 cm
Screen print in one color on offset lithograph, black on white card. Edition 100. “for Paul” written in pencil lower middle: this copy an ar...
Category
1970s Modern Dieter Roth More Prints
Materials
Lithograph, Screen
Goodbye Sharpie Dieter Roth black and white geometric abstract print
By Dieter Roth
Located in New York, NY
Dieter Roth
Goodbye Sharpie, 1972
44.5 x 54.3 / 113 x 138 cm
Planographic printing from zinc, white on dyed grey card
Edition of 30, this copy marked "Artist's Copy" and annotated II/IV
Dieter Roth was a printmaker from childhood: his first etching at the age of 16 was scratched into a soda can, and despite the failure of the can to print anything but a shadow of ink, he continued his study and by 20 was a serious apprentice in lithography to a well-known commercial artist, Eugen Jordi. Later he would continue to print and publish much of his own work. From the 1960s onward, his collaborations with Petersburg Press brought him international recognition and produced some of his most celebrated work: Six Piccadillies (1970), and Containers (1972).
Interested in chance and spontaneity, Roth was drawn to make prints using unorthodox means: according to mathematical principles, using equations, or by randomly rearranging blocks before they were run through the press. The artist often printed plates repeatedly in different colors, producing many variations from just a few images. He used the printing press and materials to interrogate the creative process rather than just as tools to achieve an edition of identical prints: for example, overprinting or under-inking, or running objects through the press (in 1968, a box of chocolates). Roth was not just interested in the chance of making pictures but the unpredictability of decay: allowing the grease from slices of meat to slowly contaminate paper, immersing a print in vegetable juice, clamping metal to paper to produce rust, and pouring chocolate over a finished work.
Roth would make hundreds of print editions and books over his career and blurred the line between genres and mediums, embarking on prodigious collaborations and experimentation with music, poetry...
Category
1970s Abstract Dieter Roth More Prints
Materials
Lithograph
Wrapper by Dieter Roth abstract pink unique one of a kind print with shimmer
By Dieter Roth
Located in New York, NY
Wrapper, 1971
34 x 39.75 in. / 86.5 x 101 cm
Lithograph (Zinc) in 6 colours, 4 printing forms on white paper.
Edition of 19, numbered and signed, each a unique print, 3 AP.
Numbere...
Category
1970s Abstract Dieter Roth More Prints
Materials
Lithograph
A Muse by Dieter Roth set of ten abstract black and white lithographs
By Dieter Roth
Located in New York, NY
This series of abstract black and white Roth prints is full of movement, wildly diverse mark making, visceral, three-dimensional shapes and dynamic sketched lines. The artist worked on the same stone, erasing and adding elements with each step of the process to create a new print. Working on a lithography stone allowed him to scratch away areas with precision, revealing tightly hatched white lines that complement swaths of smokey gray. A Muse reflects Roth’s interest in permutations, decay, and a mathematical approach to making images. Each week the artist created a new variant: the series was originally planned as a set of 52.
Dieter Roth, A Muse 1971-1972
series of 12 prints (this set is an incomplete set of ten prints), lithographs from stone printed in black on white handmade paper
image 18.9 × 14.6 in / 48 x 37 cm paper 30.7 × 20.9 in / 78 x 53 cm
edition of 30 each, numbered and signed, 6 artists copies
this series 1/30
printed by Karl Schulz, Braunschweig and published by Petersburg Press, London
weekly variant printed from the same stone, began October 1971
(52 prints were planned, but only 12 were executed)
Condition: excellent with some dimples and wear commensurate with age
Catalogue Reference: Roth 185-196
Dieter Roth was a printmaker from childhood: his first etching at the age of 16 was scratched into a soda can, and despite the failure of the can to print anything but a shadow of ink, he continued his study and by 20 was a serious apprentice in lithography to a well-known commercial artist, Eugen Jordi. Later he would continue to print and publish much of his own work. From the 1960s onward, his collaborations with Petersburg Press brought him international recognition and produced some of his most celebrated work: Six Piccadillies (1970), and Containers (1972).
Interested in chance and spontaneity, Roth was drawn to make prints using unorthodox means: according to mathematical principles, using equations, or by randomly rearranging blocks before they were run through the press. The artist often printed plates repeatedly in different colors, producing many variations from just a few images. He used the printing press and materials to interrogate the creative process rather than just as tools to achieve an edition of identical prints: for example, overprinting or under-inking, or running objects through the press (in 1968, a box of chocolates). Roth was not just interested in the chance of making pictures but the unpredictability of decay: allowing the grease from slices of meat to slowly contaminate paper, immersing a print in vegetable juice, clamping metal to paper to produce rust, and pouring chocolate over a finished work.
Roth would make hundreds of print editions and books over his career and blurred the line between genres and mediums, embarking on prodigious collaborations and experimentation with music, poetry...
Category
1970s Abstract Dieter Roth More Prints
Materials
Lithograph
Po th A a Vfb (Portrait of the Artist as Vogelfutterbüste) by Dieter Roth
By Dieter Roth
Located in New York, NY
P o th A a Vfb (Portrait of the Artist as Vogelfutterbüste) 1970
Plate 12.4 x 8.6 in. / 31.5 x 22 cm / Paper 30.7 x 21 in. / 78 x 53.5 cm
Intaglio printing (halftone block) in black ...
Category
1970s Abstract Dieter Roth More Prints
Materials
Etching
A Muse (single print #11) by Dieter Roth abstract black and white lithograph
By Dieter Roth
Located in New York, NY
This abstract black and white Roth print is full of movement, wildly diverse mark making, visceral, three-dimensional shapes and dynamic sketched lines. It is a single print from the...
Category
1970s Abstract Dieter Roth More Prints
Materials
Lithograph
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Helen Frankenthaler, A Brief Biography
Helen Frankenthaler (1928-2011), whose career spanned six decades, has long been recognized as one of the great American artists of the twentieth century. She was eminent among the second generation of postwar American abstract painters and is widely credited for playing a pivotal role in the transition from Abstract Expressionism to Color Field painting. Through her invention of the soak-stain technique, she expanded the possibilities of abstract painting, while at times referencing figuration and landscape in unique ways. She produced a body of work whose impact on contemporary art has been profound and continues to grow.
Frankenthaler was born on December 12, 1928, and raised in New York City. She attended the Dalton School, where she received her earliest art instruction from Rufino Tamayo. In 1949 she graduated from Bennington College, Vermont, where she was a student of Paul Feeley. She later studied briefly with Hans Hofmann.
Frankenthaler’s professional exhibition career began in 1950, when Adolph Gottlieb selected her painting Beach (1950) for inclusion in the exhibition titled Fifteen Unknowns: Selected by Artists of the Kootz Gallery. Her first solo exhibition was presented in 1951, at New York’s Tibor de Nagy Gallery, and that year she was also included in the landmark exhibition 9th St. Exhibition of Paintings and Sculpture.
In 1952 Frankenthaler created Mountains and Sea, a breakthrough painting of American abstraction for which she poured thinned paint directly onto raw, unprimed canvas laid on the studio floor, working from all sides to create floating fields of translucent color. Mountains and Sea was immediately influential for the artists who formed the Color Field school of painting, notable among them Morris Louis and Kenneth Noland.
As early as 1959, Frankenthaler began to be a regular presence in major international exhibitions. She won first prize at the Premiere Biennale de Paris that year, and in 1966 she represented the United States in the 33rd Venice Biennale, alongside Ellsworth Kelly, Roy Lichtenstein, and Jules Olitski. She had her first major museum exhibition in 1960, at New York’s Jewish Museum, and her second, in 1969, at the Whitney Museum of American Art, followed by an international tour.
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