About The Work
Louise Nevelson is renowned for her mysterious and complex artworks. She was an active printmaker, experimenting with different techniques and approaches while working with some of the best print-making studios in the United States.
Nevelson, whether working in sculpture or in two dimensions typically had a strict palette; almost exclusively black. While there are iconic works in white, gold, or raw wood, Nevelson almost entirely avoids color. However, during the last decade of her life, her palette expands notably with her printmaking.
"Reflections II" is an example from her 1983 portfolio, "Reflections I-V" consisting of six large-scale prints. These prints contain signature elements found throughout Nevelson's prints; ripped or collage-like forms as well as the use of fabric, lace, and toile in the printing process. However one of the strongest characteristics of the "Reflections" series is her new uninhibited use of color.
Here it is used to maximum effect. This work features unexpected elements of tangerine, translucent Prussian blue, and mint green that punctuate her signature layered collage-like composition. Nevelson's late prints are truly some of her best.
Courtesy of Caviar20
About Louise Nevelson
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: The Artspace Group Show: Ukrainian Art
- Interviews & Features: Monica Nelson - The Art for Home Interview
- News & Events: To Protest Trump's Ban, This Museum Will Remove All Art Made By Immigrants
- Art 101: MoMA, the Groovy Years: 7 Transformative Exhibitions From the Swinging Sixties
- Interviews & Features: In Search of a More Equal Art History: Curator Adrienne Edwards on the Upending Power of "Blackness in Abstraction"
Color etching and aquatint on cream Copperplate wove paper
45.75 x 35.25 in
116.2 x 89.5 cm
This work is signed, dated and numbered by the artist, lower margin.
About The Work
Louise Nevelson is renowned for her mysterious and complex artworks. She was an active printmaker, experimenting with different techniques and approaches while working with some of the best print-making studios in the United States.
Nevelson, whether working in sculpture or in two dimensions typically had a strict palette; almost exclusively black. While there are iconic works in white, gold, or raw wood, Nevelson almost entirely avoids color. However, during the last decade of her life, her palette expands notably with her printmaking.
"Reflections II" is an example from her 1983 portfolio, "Reflections I-V" consisting of six large-scale prints. These prints contain signature elements found throughout Nevelson's prints; ripped or collage-like forms as well as the use of fabric, lace, and toile in the printing process. However one of the strongest characteristics of the "Reflections" series is her new uninhibited use of color.
Here it is used to maximum effect. This work features unexpected elements of tangerine, translucent Prussian blue, and mint green that punctuate her signature layered collage-like composition. Nevelson's late prints are truly some of her best.
Courtesy of Caviar20
About Louise Nevelson
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: The Artspace Group Show: Ukrainian Art
- Interviews & Features: Monica Nelson - The Art for Home Interview
- News & Events: To Protest Trump's Ban, This Museum Will Remove All Art Made By Immigrants
- Art 101: MoMA, the Groovy Years: 7 Transformative Exhibitions From the Swinging Sixties
- Interviews & Features: In Search of a More Equal Art History: Curator Adrienne Edwards on the Upending Power of "Blackness in Abstraction"
Published by Pace Editions, Inc., New York.
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