Nov 12, 2014 - Sale 2365

Sale 2365 - Lot 45

Unsold
Estimate: $ 3,000 - $ 5,000
PHILIP GUSTON
Untitled.

Lithograph, 1966. 330x570 mm; 13x22 inches, full margins. Signed, dated and numbered 22/25 in pencil, lower margin. Printed and published by Hollander's Workshop, Inc., New York, with the blind stamp lower right. From A Suite of Ten Lithographs. A superb impression of this very scarce lithograph.

Born Philip Goldtsein to Russian emigré parents in Montreal, Guston (1913-1980) attended the Los Angeles Manual Arts High School, where he became friends with Jackson Pollock (both he and Pollock were expelled from that school for a satrical pamphlet they created). Guston pursued a career in the arts that led him to the Otis Art Institute and a lifelong friendship with artist Reuben Kadish. Guston and Kadish toured Mexico in 1935, meeting Diego Rivera, and by 1936 had arrived in New York to work under the Federal Art Project, WPA. His first solo show at the Midtown Gallery, New York, in 1947 was followed by travels to Italy.

When he returned to New York in the 1950s, he renewed his friendship with Pollock, as well as Adolph Gottlieb and Willem de Kooning, and began painting in a looser, more expressive style. Guston's lithographs from the 1960s reflect the imagery of his painting and drawings from this time (see lots 46-48); they seem to represent still lifes--like the present work--drawn with bold, gestural strokes not unlike Pollock's Black Paintings from the early 1950s.