HOMAGE TO FRANK STELLA
Mnuchin Gallery is honored to announce Homage to Frank Stella. In commemoration of both his life and artistic legacy, the selected works illuminate the enduring significance of Stella’s diverse and exploratory oeuvre through seminal examples spanning from 1958 to 2023.
September 18, 2024 - January 25, 2025
At the height of the Abstract Expressionist movement, Stella redefined painting with his Black, Aluminum, and Copper series, proposing a new trajectory for the medium which presaged Minimalism. The historical significance of Stella’s early works is epitomized in pieces like Arbeit Macht Frei (1958) (Work Will Set You Free), where the haunting phrase from Auschwitz’s entrance imbues a dark, contemplative gravitas; or the copper Telluride (1960-1961), where he emphatically conveys his progression toward a more sculptural approach with a T-shaped canvas. These foundational series would naturally evolve into the asymmetrically shaped canvases, bold colors, and geometric patterns that characterize his Concentric Squares, Protractors, and Irregular Polygons.
Stella sought to challenge and broaden the spatial and conceptual definitions of painting, or as he explained, “what painting wants more than anything else is working space—space to grow with and expand into, pictorial space that is capable of direction and movement, pictorial space that encourages unlimited orientation and extension.”
A masterfully innovative artist, Stella’s late career is further defined by his ventures into the sculptural realm, with dynamic shapes and intricate linear constructions reflecting his enduring fascination with the interplay of materials, forms, and structures. Stella’s use of Protogen RPT, a lightweight and durable resin, exemplifies his innovative approach to integrating new materials into his work. In K. 179 (2011), the combination of Protogen RPT and stainless steel tubing enables Stella to synthesize color, shape, and movement in a manner that poetically responds to the rhythms of Domenico Scarlatti’s sonatas. Yet, it is Star with square tubing (2016) that best crystallizes Stella’s decades-long exploration of working space.
Through his groundbreaking explorations of form, color, and spatial relationships, Stella not only challenged the conventions of art history, but also inspired generations of artists to push the limits of their own creativity.