Bamboo 2000
Howard Hodgkin
Limited Edition Print : Screenprint in 38 Colors on Somerset Texture Paper
Size : 26.3x30.55 in | 67x78 cm
Edition : From the Edition of 108
- 🔥Framed Limited Edition Screenprint - Inquire
Year2000
Hand SignedLower Center in Pencil
Condition Excellent
Framed with PlexiglassGold Frame w/ White Mat
Purchased fromAuction House 2023
Story / Additional InfoSir Howard Hodgkin (1932 - 2017) Title: Bamboo (s.9718) Medium: Screenprint, 2000, from 38 screens in 38 colours, on Somerset Texture (300 gsm) paper, signed with initials in pencil (lower centre). There were also 18 artists proofs and 9 printers proofs , 1 BAT and 10 replacement proofs. Published by : The Lincoln Centre/List Art Posters & Prints, New York. Printed by : Jon Wise and Steven Sangenario at Brand X Editions Ltd, New York. Note: This was based on “Bamboo” Oil on wood, 1995/7. It was also produced as a poster in an edition of 750 printed by Brand X Editions, New York. Poster size 840 x 890 mms. This advertised the Lincoln Center’s Mostly Mozart Festival. This work is catalogued by Heenk in the section “Limited Edition reproductive prints” Literature: Liesbeth Heenk “Howard Hodgkin: The Complete Prints” Page 225.
Certificate of AuthenticityArt Brokerage
LID165485
Howard Hodgkin - United States
Art Brokerage: Howard Hodgkin British Artist: B. 1932. Howard Hodgkin was born on the 6th August 1932 in London, he studied art at both Camberwell art school and Bath Academy of Art. Hodgkin had his first one man show in 1962 at Arthur Tooth and sons, London and held further one man shows sporadically over a period of several years. The momentum of Hodgkin's work carried him into the 1970's with such excitement and anticipation that he had sequential one man shows at some of the most respected art institutions in Britain and around the World. The eighties brought further success for Hodgkin's as his appeal was reaching wider audiences in different countries including the USA, Brazil, Sweden, Australia and Italy to name but a few. Hodgkin couldn't escape the attention of the London Weekend Television program The South Bank Show in 1981, he also won the much coveted Turner Prize in 1985 on home soil in London. The nineties brought further plaudits for the artist and his amazing work, in 1992 he was awarded a Knighthood. His one man shows continued through the nineties and into the new millennium where one thing is for certain, that Howard Hodgkin will remain a source of brilliance and excitement in this new era of art. Listings wanted.