<p>FRANK STELLA</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>AMERICAN ABSTRACT ARTIST</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>By James Pearson</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;&lt;P&gt; A study of the American abstract artist Frank Stella (b. 1936) surveying his career from the famous <em>Black Paintings</em> of the late 1950s up to the present day. &lt;/P&gt;&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;&lt;P&gt; Frank Stella has become become among America&#39;s premier contemporary artists. Unlike many modern artists Stella has always worked in abstraction. His art is irrepressible daring hugely enjoyable and refreshingly angst-free. &lt;/P&gt;&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;&lt;P&gt; This book begins with the celebrated <em>Black Paintings</em> of 1959 moves on through the Minimalist <em>Copper</em> and <em>Aluminium</em> paintings of the early Sixties to the exuberant <em>Protractor</em> series the expansion into three dimensions in the 1970s and closing with the 3-dimensional <em>Polish Village Exotic Birds</em> and <em>Brazilian</em> &#39;maximalist&#39; works of the 1980s and 1990s. &lt;/P&gt;&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;&lt;P&gt; Employing the most up-to-date art criticism of Frank Stella James Pearson also looks at Stella&#39;s contemporaries: Jasper Johns Robert Rauschenberg Kenneth Noland Jules Olitski Morris Louis Robert Ryman Brice Marden Mark Rothko and Barnett Newman among others. &lt;/P&gt;&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp; &lt;P&gt; Includes new illustrations and quotes from the artist.<br />&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;&lt;P&gt; EXTRACT FROM CHAPTER 5</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;&lt;P&gt; There does not seem to be much going on in some of Frank Stella&#39;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. &lt;/P&gt;&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;&lt;P&gt; Frank Stella&#39;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 <em>Black Stripe Paintings</em> his <em>Protractor </em>series his copper paintings his <em>India Birds</em> are intense works of art. &lt;/P&gt;&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;&lt;P&gt; 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&#39;s doing. His paintings do not lurk in gallery corners shyly. His paintings announce themselves instantly and powerfully. Stella&#39;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. &lt;/P&gt;&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;</p><p>&nbsp;&lt;P&gt; REVISED AND UPDATED WITH NEW ILLUSTRATIONS.&nbsp;</p><p>Fully illustrated with a revised text. Bibliography and notes. ISBN 9781861717511. &lt;/P&gt;&nbsp;</p><p>Also available in hardback.&nbsp;</p><p>www.crmoon.com</p><p>&nbsp;</p>
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