Ed Clark Lithograph


Item Number: 107

Time Left: CLOSED

Value: $10,000

Online Close: Apr 30, 2013 10:00 PM EDT

Bid History: 0 bids


Description

Untitled Ed Clark Lithograph, 35.2" x 34.2"


About the Artist


Edward Clark is an abstract painter whose work has drawn accolades internationally for five decades. He is the first painter credited with working on a shaped canvas, an innovation that influenced contemporary art through the 1950s and 1960s. He is also known for his powerful brush stroke, large-scale canvases, and especially, his use of color, which makes some people call him an "Abstract Impressionist."


After living for five years in Paris, Clark came to New York and became a charter member of the Brata gallery on Tenth Street, where artists like George Sugarman, Sal Romanao, Al Held, John Krushenick, and Ronald Bladen were shown. It was during this period that he made his celebrated shaped canvas, which appeared in the Brata gallery Christmas group show in 1957. The painting was later to be described in a 1972 Art News article by Lawrence Campbell as generally considered to be the first of its kind.


Another early shaped painting made by Clark in 1957 is now in the permanent collection of the Art Institute of Chicago. Clark made his first oval painting while living in Vétheuil, France (early home of Claude Monet) in 1968. This was almost a decade after Clark first started using his push broom technique, which allows him to move paint swiftly across the canvas, creating broad bold strokes.


Clark has always been an inventive and creative artist, experimenting with techniques, like his innovative use of the push broom, for example, and his method of working on paper with dry pigment, inspired by the “pouring sand” technique of the Pueblo tribe of the American Southwest.


His work continues to evolve and astonish.

Special Instructions

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Item is in condition as donated. Cannot be returned or exchanged. 


 


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Donated by

Russell Simmons