FRANK STELLA
A study of the American abstract artist Frank Stella (b. 1936),
surveying his career from the famous Black Paintings of the late
1950s up to the present.
Frank Stella has become become among America's premier
contemporary artists. Unlike many 20th century artists, Stella has
always worked in abstraction. His art is irrepressible, daring,
hugely enjoyable, and refreshingly angst-free. This book begins
with the celebrated Black Paintings of 1959, moves on through the
Minimalist Copper and Aluminium paintings of the early Sixties, to
the exuberant Protractor series, the expansion into three
dimensions in the 1970s, and closing with the 3-dimensional Polish
Village, Exotic Birds and Brazilian 'maximalist' works of the 1980s
and 1990s.
Employing the most up-to-date art criticism of Frank Stella,
James Pearson also looks at Stella's contemporaries: Jasper Johns,
Robert Rauschenberg, Kenneth Noland, Jules Olitski, Morris Louis,
Robert Ryman, Brice Marden, Mark Rothko and Barnett Newman among
others.
Includes new illustrations. EXTRACT FROM CHAPTER 5
There does not seem to be much going on in some of Frank
Stella's 1960s Minimal paintings. But there is, in fact, a lot
going on. Stella limits himself to a narrow set of rules. Like
Brice Marden, Barnett Newman, Morris Louis and Mark Rothko, Stella
sets himself to explore a few configurations of painting. But these
things - the shape of the canvas, internal organization of the
stripes, colour of the bands - offer up endless permutations.
Frank Stella's paintings are lean, but leanness does not
necessarily mean unfeelingness. This is the problem that monochrome
painting creates, and Minimal art in general. Certainly Stella is
intense: his Black Stripe Paintings, his Protractor series, his
copper paintings, his India Birds, are intense works of art.
The Stella exhibitions of the late 1980s and early 1990s were
affairs, in which one was impressed by a sense of colour and light,
a spaciousness to the works, and a huge scale, so that each work
dominated the gallery rooms. Stella is in no way a quiet,
unobtrusive artist: his paintings are domineering, self-confident,
assured of their own effects. Stella has always been an artist who
knows what he's doing. His paintings do not lurk in gallery
corners, shyly. His paintings announce themselves instantly and
powerfully. Stella's June-July 1985 show at the ICA in London was
typical: massive multi-media works were squeezed into the
ubiquitous sparse white rooms, completely taking over the sedate
spaces.
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