About The Work
In 1992, LeWitt was commissioned to create this screenprint for the 100th anniversary of the Olympic games. The work was included in the Olympic Centennial Suite portfolio, which featured works by 50 international artists.
"Five Pointed Star with Color Bands" is a paradigm of LeWitt's work from the 80s and 90s. During this period, LeWitt embraced a palette of rich autumnal colors often realized in gouache. He continued to be fascinated by shapes, grids, and their relationship to color.
This hypnotic and playful star is a recurring motif throughout the artist's oeuvre and stands as an excellent example of his signature hard-edge abstraction and unwavering exploration of geometry.
Sol LeWitt's work is represented in numerous public institutions including the MoMA (New York), the Tate Modern (London), the National Gallery of Art (Washington, D.C.), and the Centre Pompidou (Paris), among others.
About Sol LeWitt
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: Art & Style For Home - The best Artspace design objects for your tabletop
- Interviews & Features: On View, Fall 2019: 7 Works by Blue-Chip Artists to Invest in This Month
- Art 101: Can You Tell a Donald Judd From a Carl Andre? Test Your Minimalism IQ
- Interviews & Features: Art Road Trip! 10 Public Sculptures Worth Driving Cross-Country For
- Interviews & Features: 5 Art Galleries to Know in Chicago
Color screenprint on Arches Cover White
32.75 x 22.25 in
83.2 x 56.5 cm
This work is signed and numbered in pencil, lower right.
About The Work
In 1992, LeWitt was commissioned to create this screenprint for the 100th anniversary of the Olympic games. The work was included in the Olympic Centennial Suite portfolio, which featured works by 50 international artists.
"Five Pointed Star with Color Bands" is a paradigm of LeWitt's work from the 80s and 90s. During this period, LeWitt embraced a palette of rich autumnal colors often realized in gouache. He continued to be fascinated by shapes, grids, and their relationship to color.
This hypnotic and playful star is a recurring motif throughout the artist's oeuvre and stands as an excellent example of his signature hard-edge abstraction and unwavering exploration of geometry.
Sol LeWitt's work is represented in numerous public institutions including the MoMA (New York), the Tate Modern (London), the National Gallery of Art (Washington, D.C.), and the Centre Pompidou (Paris), among others.
About Sol LeWitt
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: Art & Style For Home - The best Artspace design objects for your tabletop
- Interviews & Features: On View, Fall 2019: 7 Works by Blue-Chip Artists to Invest in This Month
- Art 101: Can You Tell a Donald Judd From a Carl Andre? Test Your Minimalism IQ
- Interviews & Features: Art Road Trip! 10 Public Sculptures Worth Driving Cross-Country For
- Interviews & Features: 5 Art Galleries to Know in Chicago
Printed by Keizo Tasaka, Watanabe Studio, Ltd., Brooklyn. Published by Puma Trading, Paris, or Editiones Catalanes, Barcelona, for the International Olympic Committee, with the blind stamp lower center.
- Ships in 5 to 7 business days from Canada.
- This work is final sale and not eligible for return.
- Questions about this work?
- Interested in other works by this artist or other artists? We will source them for you.
- Want to pay in installments?
Contact an Artspace Advisor
advisor@artspace.com