Robert Motherwell - Modern and Contemporary Editions New York Sunday, November 15, 2009 | Phillips

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  • Literature

    Siri Engberg and Joan Banach 235; Tyler Graphics 396

  • Artist Biography

    Robert Motherwell

    American • 1915 - 1991

    One of the youngest proponents of the Abstract Expressionist movement, Robert Motherwell rose to critical acclaim with his first solo exhibition at Peggy Guggenheim's Art of This Century gallery in 1944. Not only was Motherwell one of the major practicing Abstract Expressionist artists, he was, in fact, the main intellectual driving force within the movement—corralling fellow New York painters such as Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, Hans Hoffman and William Baziotes into his circle. Motherwell later coined the term the "New York School", a designation synonymous to Abstract Expressionism that loosely refers to a wide variety of non-objective work produced in New York between 1940 and 1960.

    During an over five-decade-long career, Motherwell created a large and powerful body of varied work that includes paintings, drawings, prints and collages. Motherwell's work is most generally characterized by simple shapes, broad color contrasts and a dynamic interplay between restrained and gestural brushstrokes. Above all, it demonstrates his approach to art-making as a response to the complexity of lived, and importantly felt, experience.

    View More Works

137

St. Michael I (State II)

1979
Lithograph, screenprint and monoprint in colors, on Arches Cover paper, the full sheet, 
S. 63 x 25 3/8 in. (160 x 64.5 cm)
signed and numbered `ap VII/IX' in pencil (an artist's proof, the edition was 34), published by Tyler Graphics, Ltd., Mount Kisco, New York (with their blindstamp), occasional minor scuffing and surface soiling, very minor wear along the sheet edges, offsetting on the reverse, otherwise in very good condition, unframed. 

Estimate
$2,500 - 3,500 

Sold for $4,000

Modern and Contemporary Editions

15 Nov 2009
New York