Edition of 30
Publisher: The Litho Shop, Ltd., Santa Monica, California.
Printed by George Page, assisted by Dan Cytron and keith Kirts, at the Litho Shop, Santa Monica, California.
- Medium
- Signature
- Hand-signed by artist, Signed lower right; numbered lower left; publisher's chop lower right.
- Frame
- Not included
The painterly abstraction of Sam Francis is most often associated with the American Abstract Expressionist movement, but Francis also spent a great deal of time in Paris and became linked with the parallel movement of Art Informel in Europe. Francis’ most iconic works are characterized by saturated splashes of color that populate the edges of the canvas in order to emphasize the luminous white void in the center. This contrast between the vibrancy of Francis’ color palette and the austere white picture plane demonstrate the artist’s concern with relationships of space, color, and light, as opposed to the psychologically expressive tendencies of contemporaries such as Jackson Pollock.
- High auction record
- $11.8m, Sotheby's, 2016
- Established
- Represented by industry leading galleries.
- Collected by major museums
- Tate, Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields, Anderson Collection at Stanford University
- 2017
- Sam Francis, Bernard Jacobson GallerySam Francis - Prints, Bernard Jacobson Gallery
- 2015
- Sam Francis: A Survey of Graphic Work, Bernard Jacobson Gallery
Under Blue, 1973
Learn more.
Edition of 30
Publisher: The Litho Shop, Ltd., Santa Monica, California.
Printed by George Page, …
- Medium
- Signature
- Hand-signed by artist, Signed lower right; numbered lower left; publisher's chop lower right.
- Frame
- Not included
The painterly abstraction of Sam Francis is most often associated with the American Abstract Expressionist movement, but Francis also spent a great deal of time in Paris and became linked with the parallel movement of Art Informel in Europe. Francis’ most iconic works are characterized by saturated splashes of color that populate the edges of the canvas in order to emphasize the luminous white void in the center. This contrast between the vibrancy of Francis’ color palette and the austere white picture plane demonstrate the artist’s concern with relationships of space, color, and light, as opposed to the psychologically expressive tendencies of contemporaries such as Jackson Pollock.
- High auction record
- $11.8m, Sotheby's, 2016
- Established
- Represented by industry leading galleries.
- Collected by major museums
- Tate, Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), Indianapolis Museum of Art at Newfields, Anderson Collection at Stanford University