

255
Howard Hodgkin
Lotus
- Estimate
- $2,000 - 3,000
Lot Details
Screenprint in colors with embossing, on Velin Arches paper, with full margins,
1980
I. 29 x 36 in. (73.7 x 91.4 cm)
S. 31 1/4 x 41 3/4 in. (79.4 x 106 cm)
S. 31 1/4 x 41 3/4 in. (79.4 x 106 cm)
signed, dated `80' and numbered `A/P' in pencil (one of 15 artist's proofs, the edition was 100), published by Bernard Jacobson Ltd., London, unframed.
Specialist
Full-Cataloguing
Literature
Howard Hodgkin
British | B. 1932 D. 2017One of the greatest colorists of his generation, Howard Hodgkin explores the very nature of painting as both cultured language and sheer expression. He disregards the classical polarities of abstraction and representation, past and present, canvas and frame, using gestural brushstrokes and a vivid palette to emphasize the picture plane, while simultaneously seeking to convey memories and emotions.
The seemingly casual, urgent quality of his paintings and prints belies a drawn-out process of making: it could take a year for Hodgkin to prepare to execute a single brushstroke. The resultant maximalist, saturated works on canvas, paper, wood and board can be intimately scaled and jewel-like, or oversized, opulent and theatrical. Whilst his early compositions have a collaged, geometric flatness, Hodgkin's later work (including etching and aquatint prints) increasingly incorporated more lush surface textures and complex, fluid patterns reminiscent of the Pahari miniatures from India, of which he was an avid collector.
Browse ArtistThe seemingly casual, urgent quality of his paintings and prints belies a drawn-out process of making: it could take a year for Hodgkin to prepare to execute a single brushstroke. The resultant maximalist, saturated works on canvas, paper, wood and board can be intimately scaled and jewel-like, or oversized, opulent and theatrical. Whilst his early compositions have a collaged, geometric flatness, Hodgkin's later work (including etching and aquatint prints) increasingly incorporated more lush surface textures and complex, fluid patterns reminiscent of the Pahari miniatures from India, of which he was an avid collector.