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Sol LeWitt, Wavy lines, original signed Minimalist ink drawing on card with Warhol stamp, 2004
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Description
Sol LeWitt
Wavy lines, original signed Minimalist ink drawing on card with Warhol stamp, 2004
Drawing in black felt tip pen on postmarked (franked) postcard with Warhol postage stamp
Signed, dated January 27, '04 and inscribed "For Stuart, Many Happy Days in '04' Sol Lewitt", and addressed to Stuart Risman of D
Unique
Frame included
Unique original ink drawing on postmarked (franked) card
Signed, dated and inscribed to collector Stuart Risman
Postmark is from Connecticut, 2004
Stamped with Andy Warhol postage stamp, which first came out in 2002
Minimalist and Conceptual art drawing
Provenance: Acquired directly from Robert Risman.
This work has been elegantly floated and framed in a museum quality wood frame under plexiglass
Measurements:
Framed
7.75 inches vertical by 9.75 inches horizontal by 1.5 inches
Artwork
4.25 inches by 5.75 inches
SOL LEWITT BIOGRAPHY
Sol LeWitt (American, 1928–2007) is renowned as a founding member of both Minimalism and Conceptual Art. LeWitt attended classes at the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum in his hometown of Hartford, Connecticut as a youth, and then received a BFA from Syracuse University. After serving in the United States Army in Korea, he moved to New York in the early 1950s, took classes in illustration, and worked as a graphic designer for several magazines and for architect I.M. Pei. In the 1960s LeWitt began creating two- and three-dimensional works using the cube, varying its form through systems based on language, mathematics, and other structures. LeWitt began exhibiting his work regularly as a leader among an emerging group of Minimalist artists. His works included sculptures based on the cube, and his late 1960s “wall drawings,” in which he drew lines in pencil along gallery walls, first in verticals and horizontals, and later in complex structures of circles and arcs, painted in color with the help of assistants.
LeWitt’s work also reflects an interest in repetition and serial pieces, which he frequently uses as a way to convey the passage of time or a storyline. In addition to his sculptures, wall drawings, and two-dimensional works, LeWitt created many artists’ books, and co-founded the organization Printed Matter, which publishes and circulates artists’ books to the greater public. LeWitt moved from New York to Spoleto, Italy in 1980, and in later years worked on wooden cinderblock sculptures and large wall drawings with acrylic paint. LeWitt has held solo exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Tate Gallery in London, and the Stedelijik Museum in Amsterdam, among other venues. He has also exhibited his work at several documenta exhibitions in Kassel, Germany, and at several Venice Biennale shows. LeWitt died in New York in 2007, at 87 years old.