For Frank Stella, 1958 was a crucial year. After graduating from Princeton University, he moved to Manhattan and painted a series of monumental, colourful canvases that culminated in the first of his famous 'black paintings'. This fascinating book focuses on the thirty works he painted that year. The paintings reflect his transformation from a student experimenting with abstract expressionism to a highly original artist whose works changed the course of postwar art. Presenting the entire series of paintings in colour for the first time (except lost works known only through black-and-white photographs), this handsome book details the course of Stella's career in 1958. The authors situate his work in relation to that of Carl Andre, with whom Stella shared studio space that year and Jasper Johns. Their analysis draws on concepts of originality, repetition, assemblage and opticality. Drawing on new archival findings, firsthand observations of the paintings and interviews with Stella and members of his circle, this volume enriches our understanding of a fascinating and critical stage in the artist's development. Exhibition schedule: Arthur M.
Sackler Museum, Harvard University Art Museums, 4 February to 16 July 2006.
- ISBN10 0300109172
- ISBN13 9780300109177
- Publish Date 1 February 2006
- Publish Status Out of Print
- Out of Print 8 May 2007
- Publish Country US
- Imprint Yale University Press
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 144
- Language English