Albert Irvin U. K. , 1922-2015
Nebraska I, 2008
Screenprint and woodblock in colours on wove paper, framed
Signed by the artist and annotated in pencil, on recto
Signed by the artist and annotated in pencil, on recto
Sheet: 58 x 56.5 cm
Framed: 78 x 80 cm
Framed: 78 x 80 cm
Edition of 35
© The Estate of Albert Irvin
A pivotal figure in the post-war reassessment of painting, Irvin's encounter with American Abstract Expressionism at the Tate in 1956 proved transformative, liberating him from figuration and unlocking a lifelong...
A pivotal figure in the post-war reassessment of painting, Irvin's encounter with American Abstract Expressionism at the Tate in 1956 proved transformative, liberating him from figuration and unlocking a lifelong conviction that pure colour and mark-making could articulate the full range of human feeling without recourse to the representational.
In the Nebraska series, that conviction reaches an exhilarating pitch: bold chromatic fields, animated by the tension between screen-printed colour planes and the textured relief of woodblock, coalesce into a composition at once improvisatory and rigorously felt — Irvin himself described colour not as symbol but as sensation, relative and alive, shaped entirely by its context.
Enquire with Dellasposa to discuss acquisition or arrange a private viewing.
In the Nebraska series, that conviction reaches an exhilarating pitch: bold chromatic fields, animated by the tension between screen-printed colour planes and the textured relief of woodblock, coalesce into a composition at once improvisatory and rigorously felt — Irvin himself described colour not as symbol but as sensation, relative and alive, shaped entirely by its context.
Enquire with Dellasposa to discuss acquisition or arrange a private viewing.
Join our mailing list
* denotes required fields
We will process the personal data you have supplied to communicate with you in accordance with our Privacy Policy. You can unsubscribe or change your preferences at any time by clicking the link in our emails.