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Alex Katz’ Studio by Lowell Nesbitt

Alex Katz’ Studio by Lowell Nesbitt

Petersburg Press

Colour Lithograph

1972

Edition Size: 99

Sheet Size: 21 x 27.5 inches

Signed

Condition: Excellent

Details — Click to read

Lowell Nesbitt’s moody interior portrait of Alex Katz’ 1960s loft studio in New York City glows in shades of lavender, purple, pale yellow and indigo. This lithograph is based on the Nesbitt’s 1967 painting “Alex Katz’s studio”. The subjects of many of Nesbitt’s studio interior paintings were those of his colleagues, including Claes Oldenberg, Robert Indiana, Helen Frankenthaler, and Andy Warhol. In the background, a long shelf and a rolling artist’s cart hold cans of brushes, paint, rags, and paper. A few sheets of paper are tacked to the wall; a disassembled easel casts its shadow against a loosely sketched radiator. To the right, an empty canvas is propped against the wall, the floor protected by paper. Three empty chairs sit facing each other, suggesting a social gathering that has just ended. The artist’s mastery of texture is evident in the floor’s polished reflection: when viewed closely, Nesbitt’s fine lines scatter in every direction, yet coalesce into uncanny realism as the viewer draws back.

Paper 21 x 27.5 in. / 53 x 70 cm
Color lithograph on white paper. Signed by the artist and dated 1972 lower right in pencil, numbered 57/99 lower left in pencil.

Nesbitt was best known for his large-scale images of roses, lilies, and other blooms, depicted in close-ups reminiscent of Georgia O’Keefe’s famed flower paintings. Other favorite subjects included studio interiors (Nesbitt painted the studio of Andy Warhol), his dog – a Rottweiler named Eric, Manhattan’s major bridges, and the Neo-Classical facades of SoHo’s 19th-century cast-iron buildings. Nesbitt’s Soho mansion was a popular gathering spot in the 1970s for artists and celebrities such as Jasper Johns, Andy Warhol, James Rosenquist, Roy Lichtenstein, and Larry Rivers.

Lowell Nesbitt’s first solo museum exhibit was held at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, and the artist later bequeathed over $1 million to the museum. After the Corcoran canceled a controversial exhibition of Robert Mapplethorpe photographs, Nesbitt publicly revoked his gift, as Mapplethorpe was an old friend.

Nesbitt exhibited frequently in both the United States and Europe and is represented in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, the Art Institute of Chicago and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. His first one-man show in New York City was at the Howard Wise Gallery in 1965, and over the years he was represented in New York by the Stable Gallery, the Robert Stefanotti Gallery, the Andrew Crispo Gallery, and the Marco DiLaurenti Gallery in SoHo.

 

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