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Stanley Whitney: How High the Moon - by Cathleen Chaffee & Stanley Whitney (Hardcover)
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About this item
Highlights
- The first in-depth survey of Whitney's endless experimentation with colorPublished with Buffalo AKG Art Museum.
- Author(s): Cathleen Chaffee & Stanley Whitney
- 296 Pages
- Art, Individual Artists
Description
About the Book
To accompany the exhibition, the Buffalo AKG and DelMonico Books will publish the most comprehensive catalog yet dedicated to Stanley Whitney's pioneering fifty-year career. The book's essays contextualize Whitney's best-known gridded paintings from the past two decades alongside an historical assessment of his practice; the interconnected development of his works on paper; Whitney's relationship with the written word; and the influences on his practice from art history, poetry, music, quilting, and more.
Book Synopsis
The first in-depth survey of Whitney's endless experimentation with color
Published with Buffalo AKG Art Museum.
The esteemed American painter Stanley Whitney has, for 50 years, created joyful, immersive abstractions characterized by a bold, experimental palette and unique rhythm. Over the last 20 years, he has structured his paintings as loose grids: a consistent framework that frees him to work through seemingly infinite painterly variations and allows viewers to focus not on each painting's subject, but rather on our own response to color. These large-scale paintings are joined by improvisatory small paintings; drawings and prints, which constitute their own practice for Whitney; and the artist's sketchbooks, which offer a view into Whitney's engagement with the written word and politics.
This traveling North American exhibition is Whitney's first museum survey, presenting 170 paintings and works on paper spanning from the 1970s to the present day. The catalog includes an introduction by exhibition organizer Cathleen Chaffee, scholarly explorations of the artist's paintings and works on paper, a chronology and illustrations of all works in the exhibition.
Stanley Whitney was born in 1946 near Philadelphia. By the early 1970s, following studies with Philip Guston and Robert Reed, and influenced by artists including Jack Whitten, Josef Albers and Piet Mondrian, he had come to see "endless possibilities" in abstraction. Over the past five decades, he has honed a unique body of densely gridded, but endlessly variable, abstract paintings, as well as drawings and prints, reflecting his interests in art, architecture, textiles and music.
Review Quotes
Throughout, whatever the medium or size, Mr. Whitney's passion for saturated color dominates.--Karen Wilken "The Wall Street Journal"
Launches readers into the vibrant world of the acclaimed artist's exploration of color like never before.--Ghalib Dhalla "Indulge"