Donald Judd - Evening & Day Editions New York Monday, April 25, 2016 | Phillips
  • Literature

    Jörg Schellmann 298-301

  • Artist Biography

    Donald Judd

    American • 1928 - 1994

    Donald Judd came to critical acclaim in the 1960s with his simple, yet revolutionary, three-dimensional floor and wall objects made from new industrial materials, such as anodized aluminum, plywood and Plexiglas, which had no precedent in the visual arts. His oeuvre is characterized by the central constitutive elements of color, material and space. Rejecting the illusionism of painting and seeking an aesthetic freed from metaphorical associations, Judd sought to explore the relationship between art object, viewer and surrounding space with his so-called "specific objects." From the outset of his three-decade-long career, Judd delegated the fabrication to specialized technicians. Though associated with the minimalist movement, Judd did not wish to confine his practice to this categorization.

     

    Inspired by architecture, the artist also designed and produced his own furniture, predominantly in wood, and eventually hired a diverse team of carpenters late in his career.

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36

Untitled

1993
The complete set of four woodcuts printed in black, orange, yellow and ultramarine blue, on Japanese paper, the full sheets, each with an oil paint stripe on the glass of the original galvanized iron frames,
all S. 23½ x 31 3/8 in. (59.7 x 79.6 cm.)
all with the Judd Estate inkstamp and numbered 10/25 in pencil on the reverse of the sheet, also numbered in black marker on the reverse of the frames (there were also 10 artist's proofs), published by Edition Schellmann, Cologne and New York.

Estimate
$40,000 - 60,000 

Sold for $87,500

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Evening & Day Editions

New York Auction 25 April 2016