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[ A series of white lines are drawn against a plain black background. The lines are arranged in a rectangle that trails off the top of the frame. A white line is drawn down the middle of the rectangle. The bottom line of the rectangle extends slightly beyond the shape. ]

Robert Motherwell

London Series I Untitled Black , 1971

Artwork Type: Prints
Medium: Color screenprint
Dimensions: 41 x 28 in. (104.14 x 71.12 cm)
Accession #: 19800661
Credit: Collection of University Art Museum, University at Albany, State University of New York on behalf of The University at Albany Foundation , Gift of Thomas Lewyn
Related Exhibition:
Affinities and Outliers: Highlights from the University at Albany Fine Art Collections
Object Label:
Robert Motherwell (1915–1991, American) was a seminal Abstract Expressionist painter and one of the youngest to belong to the New York School—a group of artists who produced non-objective, abstract work between 1940 and 1960 including Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko, Joan Mitchell, and Grace Hartigan. Motherwell had the most extensive and formal education of the group and is credited for important contributions to avant-garde art and thought. Printmaking contributed to an extraordinary benchmark in his career. He equally investigated the power of abstraction in his prints by distilling the monumentality of his large-scale paintings into smaller graphic compositions such as seen in the works that comprise London Series I.
Affinities and Outliers: Highlights from the University at Albany Fine Art Collections

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