




Robert Motherwell
Follow this Artist"London Series 1: Untitled (Blue) 1971"
1971-
Limited Edition Print : Screenprint
Size : 42x28 in | 107x71 cm
Framed : 44x30 in | 112x76 cm
Edition : APREDUCEDNEW11 WATCHINGWELL PRICED - Add to Watchlist Create Similar Listing
- Very Well Priced $5,995
Hand Signed : Signed in pencil
Condition : Excellent - LONDON SERIES I: Untitled (Blue) is in excellent condition.
Framed with Plexiglass
Purchased from : Private Collector
Story / Additional Info : Literature: Engberg/Banach Catalogue Raisonne # 91. Publisher: Marlborough Graphics Inc., New York. Printed by Chris Prater, Kelpra Studio, London. The London Series marked Motherwell's largest print work to date. It is a "true" artist's proof as it is inscribed in Motherwell's hand "Robert Motherwell for RM".
Certificate of Authenticity : Art Brokerage
LID : 33757
Robert Motherwell - United States
Robert Motherwell was an American artist and seminal Abstract Expressionist painter. Influenced by automatic writing and drawing prescribed by the Surrealists, Motherwell’s practice was characterized by an intuitive approach to painting. He is perhaps best known for his iconic Elegy to the Spanish Republic series, which consists of 150 variants of black forms on white backgrounds. “Painting is a medium in which the mind can actualize itself; it is a medium of thought,” he once reflected. “Thus painting, like music, tends to become its own content.” Born on January 24, 1915 in Aberdeen, WA, he moved to New York to study at Columbia University with the art historian Meyer Schapiro. It was notably Schapiro that initially encouraged Motherwell to start making paintings. During the early 1940s, he entered a milieu of young artists that included William Baziotes, Jackson Pollock, and Willem de Kooning. Motherwell later taught Cy Twombly and Robert Rauschenberg at the famed Black Mountain College. Returning to New York, he met the painter Helen Frankenthaler in 1957, whom he married three years later. During their 13 year marriage, the two artists’ mutual interest in the poetry of abstraction fueled one another’s work. The artist died on July 16, 1991 in Cape Cod, MA. Today, his works are held in the collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., The Museum of Modern Art in New York, and the Tate Modern in London, among others. Listings wanted. Check out our new sister site Bluechipartbrokerage.com