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436

Sol LeWitt

White Lines in Four Directions on Red, Yellow and Blue (K. 1994.06)

Estimate
£1,500 - 2,000
£1,548
Lot Details
The complete set of three screenprints in colours, on Somerset Textured paper, the full sheets.
1994
all S. 45.4 x 33.3 cm (17 7/8 x 13 1/8 in.)
Signed and numbered 53/100 in pencil on the blue sheet (there were also 20 artist's proofs), co-published by RENN Productions and Marc Blondeau, Paris, printed in the United States, framed.

Sol LeWitt

American | B. 1928 D. 2007
Connected to the Conceptual and Minimalist art movements of the 1960s and '70s, the artist and theorist Sol LeWitt was a pivotal figure in driving 'idea' art into the mainstream art discourse. Redefining what constituted a work of art and its genesis, LeWitt explored these ideas through wall drawings, paintings, sculptures, works on paper and prints.

Using a prescription to direct the creation of a work, the artist’s hand subordinated to the artist's thoughts, in direct contrast to the Abstract Expressionist movement earlier in the century. Actions, forms and adjectives were broken down into terms, serially repeated and reconfigured: grids, lines, shapes, color, directions and starting points are several examples. These directives and constructs fueled an influential career of vast variety, subtlety and progression.
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