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12 December 2024
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Friedel Dzubas
Untitled (GT/FD 1982 w.12) aka "Santa Barbara"
, 1982
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Friedel Dzubas
Untitled (GT/FD 1982 w.12) aka "Santa Barbara"
, 1982
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for more images
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Friedel Dzubas
American/German, 1915–1994
Untitled (GT/FD 1982 w.12) aka "Santa Barbara"
,
1982
Friedel Dzubas
Untitled (GT/FD 1982 w.12) aka "Santa Barbara"
, 1982
close
Friedel Dzubas
Untitled (GT/FD 1982 w.12) aka "Santa Barbara"
, 1982
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
Zoom
Medium
Prints and multiples, Monotype on cast pulp paper (unique)
Price
Price on Request
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Caviar20
Toronto
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About this Artwork
Size Notes
34”H 34”W (work)
37.5"H 37.5"W (framed)
Movement
Contemporary Art
Image Rights
Printed and the Garner Tullis Workshop (California)
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Description
Friedel Dzubas (1915-1994) was a Berlin-born, American abstract painter and a key artist associated with the both the New York School and the Color Field movement.
Dzubas studied art in Germany before fleeing the Nazi regime in 1939 and settling in New York City. During the 1940’s, Dzubas circulated with some of the leading abstract painters in the city's vital art scene. One of Dzubas first major exhibitions took place at the 9th Street Art Exhibition in 1951, a groundbreaking and historical art exhibit featuring a number of boundary-pushing, notable artists. This exhibition acted as an introduction to the New York School of post-war avant garden artists.
Dzubas had an important proximity, and contribution to the emergence of Color Field painting. He shared a studio with Helen Frankenthaler as she began pouring and staining her canvases, evolving/surpassing the techniques embraced by the Abstract Expressionists.
During the late 60’s Dzubas rose to fame and became associated with the Color field painting and Lyrical Abstraction movements.
This work is exemplary of Dzubas' use and love of rich saturated colors. Dzubas did not delve into printmaking with the same intensity as his contemporaries, such as Frankenthaler. However like many of the leading American artists in the late 1970's and early 1980's he did experiment with cast pulp paper. This rediscovered material and print-making method was embraced for its hand-made and distinctive texture and how it absorbed and presented color.
This work is a fine example of Dzubas' use of color yet it is also somewhat uncharacteristically disciplined and elongated, with its arrangements of long stripes of various thickness.
Today Friedel Dzubas' works hang in the permanent collections of some of the most prestigious art institutions in the world; including, the Whitney Museum, NY, the Guggenheim, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, and the Albright-Knox.
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