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From the Black Series II (1 of 8 untitled) 1967 | Lithograph on paper – 381 x 559 mm

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

From the Black Series II (1 of 8 untitled) -1967

Lithograph on paper -381 x 559 mm

Frank Stella (born May 12, 1936) is an American painter and printmaker, noted for his work in the areas of minimalism and post-painterly abstraction. Stella continues to live and work in New York. -wikipedia

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From the Black Series II (2 of 8 untitled) -1967

Lithograph on paper -381 x 559 mm

Frank Stella’s Black Series II is a portfolio of eight lithographs. They were published by Gemini G.E.L in an edition of one hundred and the Tate copy is number five. The lithographs transpose the compositions of Stella’s diamond-pattern Black Paintings (1959-1960) into prints. Stella gave them the same names as the paintings they were based upon: Tuxedo Park, Gezira, Point of Pines, Zambesi, Jill, Delphine and Hippolyte, Gavotte and Turkish Mambo. The Black Series I of the same year similarly assembled twelve of his Black Paintings with rectilinear compositions. -Tate Modern (part 1)

On left, Stella painting c. 1965 in studio

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From the Black Series II (3 of 8 untitled) -1967

Lithograph on paper -381 x 559 mm

The Black Paintings (1959-1960) are Stella’s most important and radical contribution to post-war abstract painting, only rivalled by the shaped canvases executed in aluminium and copper paint between 1960 and 1961. -Tate Modern (part 2)

Upper Right: Stella blowing smoke rings

Ugo Mulas (Italian, 1928–1973)

Frank Stella with cigar, Smoking Ring , ie. circa 1964

Other, Positive black and white print on transparent film

11.7 х 8.2 in. (29.72 x 20.83 cm.)

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From the Black Series II (4 of 8 untitled) -1967

Lithograph on paper -381 x 559 mm

In 1967, Stella turned down Kenneth Tyler’s invitation to make prints at the Gemini G.E.L. workshop in Los Angeles, stating that if he ever made a drawing he used a Magic Marker pen. However, Tyler devised a custom-made marker filled with lithographic ink that could be used to draw directly onto lithographic stones. As a result, Stella began working at Gemini G.E.L (Gilmour 2000, p.6). The two Black Series were the second suites of prints Stella created at Gemini, the first being Star of Persia I and II (1967)… -Tate Modern (part 3)

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From the Black Series II (5 of 8 untitled) -1967

Lithograph on paper -381 x 559 mm

The Black Series II differs from Black Series I in the choice of paper and ink. While the first series was printed on buff-coloured paper in metallic black-grey ink, the second series employed bright white paper and ‘the sooty richness of French Charbonnel black ink,’ enhancing ‘the more aggressive optical qualities inherent in the diagonal striping’ (Axsom 1983, p.48)… -Tate Modern (part 4)

Frank Stella in his studio before a Black Painting, printed on Kodak Post Card paper.

[New York], [ NY ] : [Hollis Frampton], 1959 Permalink

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From the Black Series II (6 of 8 untitled) -1967

Lithograph on paper -381 x 559 mm

All of Stella’s early prints were based on stripe paintings – conceived as so-called ‘album’ prints which were supposed to be assembled in binders to provide an intimate record of his early work. The Black Series II was based on the complete series of diamond-pattern Black Paintings that Stella created in 1959-60, including Gavotte of 1959 which was destroyed by the artist in 1961. The related print and sketches provide the only surviving record of the work… -Tate Modern (part 5)

Frank Stella in Hollis Frampton’s Nostalgia (Hapax Legomena I), 1973.

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From the Black Series II (7 of 8 untitled) -1967

Lithograph on paper -381 x 559 mm

The prints are not illustrations of the paintings but differ significantly in detail and character. While the application of the ink with a lithographic marker recreates the free-hand quality of the paintings, the stripes in the prints are generally more clearly defined resulting in a more intensely optical diamond-pattern. Stella further changed the striped pattern and number of black bands in order to avoid the prints becoming miniature reproductions of the paintings. The images are situated off-centre, in the bottom left-hand corner of the sheets. Stella thus prevented the geometric figures assuming the object-like quality of the paintings displayed on white walls, instead ‘allowing the unpainted areas between the stripes to be identified with the paper,’ thus countering ‘traditional figure-ground relationships’ and introducing ‘an element of tension as the eye moves to correct the asymmetry’ (Axsom 1983, p.14). -Tate Modern (final part 6)

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From the Black Series II (8 of 8 untitled) -1967

Lithograph on paper -381 x 559 mm

Portrait Photographer Mark Zibert

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