The National Gallery
of Australia in Canberra is exhibiting the works of Frank Stella from November
2016 to July 2017. American artist Frank Stella and printer Kenneth Tyler are
significant 20th century printmakers.
Frank Stella (1936-)
was born in Malden, Boston. He graduated from Princeton University in New
Jersey in 1958, and moved to New York. ‘I never really wanted to become an
artist. But, I did want to make things’, Stella said in a
conversation with the Whitney Museum of American Art’s Adam D Weinberg on 7
March 2014.
He was initially interested
in Abstract Expressionism and minimalism. Stella explored renew abstraction
techniques, finding new imagery that not only embraces shape, space and colour,
but also decoration. In his search for this new path for abstraction,
he experimented with highly dramatic and almost narrative forms from the
late 1950s onward.
His evolving body of
work includes understated geometric forms to Baroque style.
MARTINA NICOLLS is an international
aid and development consultant, and the author of:- The Shortness of
Life: A Mongolian Lament (2015), Liberia’s Deadest Ends (2012), Bardot’s Comet
(2011), Kashmir on a Knife-Edge (2010) and The Sudan Curse (2009).
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