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At the age of ten Helen Frankenthaler won an honorable mention in an annual art competition run by a famous New York store and her parents encouraged her to paint and draw. From her first year studying at Dalton an obsession with art and the creative process gripped Frankenthaler. After studying at Bennington College …

Medium
Condition
Perfect
Signature
Hand-signed by artist, Signed lower right 'Frankenthaler'.
Frame
Included

A second-generation Abstract Expressionist painter, Helen Frankenthaler became active in the New York School of the 1950s, initially influenced by artists like Arshile Gorky, Willem de Kooning, and Jackson Pollock. She gained fame with her invention of the color-stain technique—applying thin washes of paint to unprimed canvas—in her iconic Mountains and Sea (1952), a motivating work for Morris Louis, Kenneth Noland, and other Color Field painters who emerged in the ’60s. Her own canvases, however, often evoked elements of landscape or figuration in the shaping of their forms. “My pictures are full of climates, abstract climates,” she once said. “They're not nature per se, but a feeling.” From 1958 to 1971, she was married to fellow Abstract Expressionist Robert Motherwell, who, like Frankenthaler, worked in symbolic painted gestures—only her paintings were almost always visibly improvised from start to finish. As poet and critic Frank O’Hara wrote in 1960, “she is willing to risk everything on inspiration.” In addition to painting, Frankenthaler also made ceramics, welded steel sculptures, and set designs, but the related medium that most attracted her, and in which her achievement came the closest painting, was printmaking—especially the creation of woodcuts, hers counting among the greatest of contemporary works in that medium.

High auction record
$7.9m, Sotheby's, 2020
Blue chip
Represented by internationally recognized galleries.
Collected by major museums
Tate, Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) , Anderson Collection at Stanford University, Helen Frankenthaler Foundation
Selected exhibitions
2019
PITTURA/PANORAMA Paintings by Helen Frankenthaler, 1952–1992Helen Frankenthaler Foundation
Helen Frankenthaler Prints: Seven Types of AmbiguityHelen Frankenthaler Foundation
Abstract Climates: Helen Frankenthaler in ProvincetownHelen Frankenthaler Foundation
View all

Thanksgiving Day, 1973

Unique painting on ceramic tile
13 1/2 × 17 1/2 × 7/10 in
34.3 × 44.5 × 1.9 cm
.
$80,000
Ships from London, GB
Shipping: $100 domestic, $500 rest of world
VAT included in price
Location
London
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At the age of ten Helen Frankenthaler won an honorable mention in an annual art competition run by …

Medium
Condition
Perfect
Signature
Hand-signed by artist, Signed lower right 'Frankenthaler'.
Frame
Included

A second-generation Abstract Expressionist painter, Helen Frankenthaler became active in the New York School of the 1950s, initially influenced by artists like Arshile Gorky, Willem de Kooning, and Jackson Pollock. She gained fame with her invention of the color-stain technique—applying thin washes of paint to unprimed canvas—in her iconic Mountains and Sea (1952), a motivating work for Morris Louis, Kenneth Noland, and other Color Field painters who emerged in the ’60s. Her own canvases, however, often evoked elements of landscape or figuration in the shaping of their forms. “My pictures are full of climates, abstract climates,” she once said. “They're not nature per se, but a feeling.” From 1958 to 1971, she was married to fellow Abstract Expressionist Robert Motherwell, who, like Frankenthaler, worked in symbolic painted gestures—only her paintings were almost always visibly improvised from start to finish. As poet and critic Frank O’Hara wrote in 1960, “she is willing to risk everything on inspiration.” In addition to painting, Frankenthaler also made ceramics, welded steel sculptures, and set designs, but the related medium that most attracted her, and in which her achievement came the closest painting, was printmaking—especially the creation of woodcuts, hers counting among the greatest of contemporary works in that medium.

High auction record
$7.9m, Sotheby's, 2020
Blue chip
Represented by internationally recognized galleries.
Collected by major museums
Tate, Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) , Anderson Collection at Stanford University, Helen Frankenthaler Foundation
Selected exhibitions (3)

Series by this artist

Other works by Helen Frankenthaler
Other works from Bernard Jacobson Gallery
Related works