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Description
Artist: John Hoyland – British (1934-2011)
Title: Orange and Pink
Year: 1971
Medium: serigraph
Image size: 17.25 x 24.5 inches
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Artist: John Hoyland – British (1934-2011)
Title: Orange and Pink
Year: 1971
Medium: serigraph
Image size: 17.25 x 24.5 inches
Sheet size: 22.5x 31 inches
Signature: Signed lower right
Edition size: 75. This one: 38/75
Publisher: Waddington Graphics, London
Printer: Chiron Press
Paper: TH Saunders, England
Condition: Good
John Hoyland’s Orange and Pink is a screenprint created when Hoyland was living and working in the city of New York. It was during this time that he worked with artists including Mark Rothko, Robert Motherwell and Larry Poons. This print is in good condition with soft creases in all four margins and a hard crease in the upper left corner, far from the image. It is signed and dated lower right, numbered lower left and titled on the reverse. This print is not from the New York Suite, but it is similar in composition and palette, though smaller in size. Please see my other works by John Hoyland which are from his New York Suite on this site.
John Hoyland RA (1934 - 2011) was a British painter known for his use of vibrant colour in producing abstractions which wavered between depth and flatness by layering harmonious and contrasting colours in compositions of irregular shapes. He is perhaps best known for his seminal series, ‘Power Stations’ (1964-1982).
Hoyland’s work in his finals show so shocked the Royal Academy Schools that the then president of the RA ordered it off the walls.
Born in Sheffield in 1934, John Hoyland exhibited his first fully abstract paintings in 1960 with the influential Situation group just months after leaving the Royal Academy. Over the next decade his career took off and in 1964 he was selected as one of curator Bryan Robertson’s New Generation artists for his exhibition of young talent at the Whitechapel Gallery. It was a generation that included Patrick Caulfield, David Hockney, Paul Huxley, Allen Jones and Bridget Riley.
In 1967 Hoyland had his first solo museum show at Whitechapel, an event the critic Mel Gooding has described as ‘a defining moment in the history of British abstract painting’ which ‘established him without question as one of the two or three best abstract painters of his generation anywhere in the world.’ Two years he later represented Great Britain with Anthony Caro at the 1969 São Paulo Biennale, Brazil.
Between 1964 and 1973 Hoyland was a frequent visitor to the United States, where he also worked in the late 1960s, bringing him into close contact with the New York art world, including critic Clement Greenberg and artists Barnett Newman, Helen Frankenthaler, Kenneth Noland, Jules Olitski, Robert Motherwell, Larry Poons and Mark Rothko, many of whom became close friends.
His work has been the subject of retrospectives at the Serpentine Gallery (1979-80), the Royal Academy of Arts, London (1999) and Tate St Ives (2006).
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