Additional information
Artist | Kleinholz |
---|---|
Country | American |
Region | North American |
ArtistKleinholz, Frank
Artist Years1901-1987
Artist NationalityAmerican
Year1960
MediumPrint > Color Lithography
Dimensions5 X 6 inches
Catalog ReferenceCole 48
Original color lithograph, printed on cream wove paper without margins. This image was used as cover for the book Frank Kleinholz, A Self Portrait, Shorewood press, New York, 1960.
Accession Number245871
NotesBorn in Brooklyn, New York, Kleinholz graduated Fordham Law School in 1923. In the 1930s, he began studying painting under Yasuo Kuniyoshi and Sol Wilson. He quickly rose to prominence with the inclusion of Abstractionists in the Carnegie Institute exhibition of 1941. The following year Back Street won a purchase prize by the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Chronology. His strongest influences were American Social Realists Reginald Marsh and Philip Evergood, the German Expressionists George Grosz and Kathe Kollewitz, the Mexican muralists Rivera, Orozco, and Siqueiros, and the early 20th century Paris Modernists. Described by Newsweek as a "Brooklyn-born Gauguin," Kleinholz focused on urban life in New York, Brooklyn and Coney Island, as well as intimate scenes of parents and children, flowers and birds, and sunbathers. His political works include antiwar paintings, ironic statements such as Man and Superman, and depictions of peace demonstrations. His style is marked by vivid color, energetic brushwork, angular geometry, forceful lines, shortened perspective, and elements of dream and fantasy. These effects combine to convey intense emotion and a complex psychological subtext. Underlying themes contrast alienation and striving, despair and caring, social criticism and exuberant individualism.
(source: kleinholz.com)
Price $125.00
Artist | Kleinholz |
---|---|
Country | American |
Region | North American |