Great presentation, as always. This video gave me the opportunity to understand his full Artistic vision, and I have only one word to describe the experience: WOW.
Thank you for another wonderful video. When I was a student at SAIC I would spend hours looking at his work, if I remember correctly, they had 3. I have taken the idea of shaped canvases to some of my works and enjoyed the excitement of moving past the typical shape of a painting. Frank has moved us to a new understanding of the "wall" and moved art forward, he will be missed but never forgotten.
Coming in to the video blind and ignorant of Stella's work, I was just about to dismiss the as not my thing, until I saw the irregular polygon paintings, those are so interesting! and the work kept getting more and more interesting as the video kept going. Really neat stuff!
Thanx Chris. I was only vaguely aware of Frank Stella but this was a nice overview of his long career. I love his work. Those newest pieces are incredible!
Mr. “what you see is what you see” I still think about that quote 20 years later. Thank you Stella for all your life’s work. Always inspiring, from the 50s stripe paintings til his last 3D works. I didn’t like neon color in art until I saw a large assemblage painting of his from the early 80s that was up at the Centré Pompidou. There was a hot pink cone graphic sticking off the corner of the work, that was odd, almost offensive that it burned into my memory 20 years ago.
Good video. The price of living a long life are all the obituaries you have to read. At Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art the Temporary Space since renamed after David Geffen, during their inaugural show back in about 1985 had a Stella black painting hung at the end of a long passage. Brilliant combination of curating, hanging and art (obviously) as you approached it the glossy black paint would reflect light and appear lighter than the matte 'white' lines. Then as you got near it the reflection would vanish and it appeared as Stella had painted it. This takes three 'good eyes' for this to happen. First, Stella making the painting, then some smart curator at MOCA, and then sharp eyed art lovers. If you want a Stella, get a square canvas, gesso it, leaving it matte. Then with a ruler and a pencil outline the black stripes. Then using gloss black paint (use acrylic - easier to clean up any mistakes.) carefully follow the pencil lines. It's okay to leave some pencil showing along the edges.(Stella did.) On the back paint a big note "Fake." (I've got my art, art of friends -- some of whom are important, and some DIY 'fakery.' If you die and some greedy relative drives all the auction houses nuts trying to get one of them to 'authenticate' your fake Stella, it will cast doubt on everything else.)
It's a strange thought, but, in presenting a broad history of modern and contemporary art together with inside views of the commecial world, Christopher West Presents may in some small part be already influencing the next movement.
More random video ideas for you : separate videos for each maybe but you could do a video on the backstory of the two major modern art galleries The Gagosian and The Pace gallery.
Great videos on topics that are all too often given short shrift & on intriguing artists who are not widely known or appreciated (e.g. On Karawa, Meg Webster, Ed Clark, et al). So it pains me to say this, “always triple check all your facts.” The first term paper that I wrote for an art history class at Williams College was on Frank Stella’s Black Paintings (1958-1960), which he began when he was in his senior year at Princeton University, four of which were exhibited at MoMA in 1959 when Stella was just 23-years-old.
How weird. I was just thinking about Stella yesterday and then this showed up in my feed and I thought TH-cam had read my mind. Hadn't heard he'd died.
Well shit. You’re totally right. As I was doing research, I came across an article that said Harvard - and unfortunately didn’t think about his college years again. Thanks for pointing that out. I will update the show notes.
What a poignant, but lovely, summary of Frank Stella's life and work. Thank you for this!
Thanks for the suggestion!
The inclusion of a section on the market is a brilliant addition.
Thank you! I never know if anyone is watching that long. Appreciate the comment.
Great presentation, as always. This video gave me the opportunity to understand his full Artistic vision, and I have only one word to describe the experience: WOW.
I really appreciate this. Thank you!
Love this series! This video was a great and succinct round up on Stella.
So nice of you to say. Thanks so much for the comment and encouragement!
i’ve spent the last week bingeing all your videos. love your channel so much, keep up the good work :-)
So nice of you to say. Thank you!
Thank you for another wonderful video. When I was a student at SAIC I would spend hours looking at his work, if I remember correctly, they had 3. I have taken the idea of shaped canvases to some of my works and enjoyed the excitement of moving past the typical shape of a painting. Frank has moved us to a new understanding of the "wall" and moved art forward, he will be missed but never forgotten.
Agreed! You might also really like Sam Gilliam’s work, in particular his draped paintings. I touched on them in a video about him a couple months ago.
Coming in to the video blind and ignorant of Stella's work, I was just about to dismiss the as not my thing, until I saw the irregular polygon paintings, those are so interesting! and the work kept getting more and more interesting as the video kept going.
Really neat stuff!
I’m glad you kept watching! There seem to be two different camps - those that like the early work, and those that like the later work.
Thanx Chris. I was only vaguely aware of Frank Stella but this was a nice overview of his long career. I love his work. Those newest pieces are incredible!
They are! And can you imagine having a home where you could put them???
I just discovered your channel and immediately started binge watching! Thank you for the amazing videos 😊
So nice of you to say! Thank you!
Again a nice video!
Thank you! 🙏
You do a great job with these videos! The perfect amount of information to introduce us to a new artist ( or gallery). Thank you!
I really appreciate that. Thank you so much!
Please keep the Weistling family in mind ; Fantastic channel!
I really appreciate it. Thank you!
very timely video - keep you the great work - much appreciated!
I really appreciate it. Thank you!
great video!!
So nice of you to say. Thanks for the comment!
As always inspiring
I really appreciate that. Thank you!
Mr. “what you see is what you see” I still think about that quote 20 years later. Thank you Stella for all your life’s work. Always inspiring, from the 50s stripe paintings til his last 3D works. I didn’t like neon color in art until I saw a large assemblage painting of his from the early 80s that was up at the Centré Pompidou. There was a hot pink cone graphic sticking off the corner of the work, that was odd, almost offensive that it burned into my memory 20 years ago.
I didn’t always love the neon either. But I guess it was reflective of the era.
Stella had an unshakeable grasp of abstraction. This video gave me pause for reflection.
I’m proud of this comment. Thank you.
Loved this. Subscribed 😉
Thank you so much!
Great video man, keep it up! Would love one on the Italian architect Ettore Sottsass:)))
Great idea! Sottsasss is a favorite of mine.
Good video. The price of living a long life are all the obituaries you have to read.
At Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art the Temporary Space since renamed after David Geffen, during their inaugural show back in about 1985 had a Stella black painting hung at the end of a long passage. Brilliant combination of curating, hanging and art (obviously) as you approached it the glossy black paint would reflect light and appear lighter than the matte 'white' lines. Then as you got near it the reflection would vanish and it appeared as Stella had painted it. This takes three 'good eyes' for this to happen. First, Stella making the painting, then some smart curator at MOCA, and then sharp eyed art lovers.
If you want a Stella, get a square canvas, gesso it, leaving it matte. Then with a ruler and a pencil outline the black stripes. Then using gloss black paint (use acrylic - easier to clean up any mistakes.) carefully follow the pencil lines. It's okay to leave some pencil showing along the edges.(Stella did.) On the back paint a big note "Fake." (I've got my art, art of friends -- some of whom are important, and some DIY 'fakery.' If you die and some greedy relative drives all the auction houses nuts trying to get one of them to 'authenticate' your fake Stella, it will cast doubt on everything else.)
I of course would never condone such actions 😉 - unless of course I really disliked my relatives!
Great channel! Greetings from Iceland
Love my international viewers. Thanks!
It's a strange thought, but, in presenting a broad history of modern and contemporary art together with inside views of the commecial world, Christopher West Presents may in some small part be already influencing the next movement.
Awesome!❤
I really appreciate it. Thank you!
Master artist painter sculptor visionary he is in my opinion one of the absolute giants of American art
I agree!
More random video ideas for you : separate videos for each maybe but you could do a video on the backstory of the two major modern art galleries The Gagosian and The Pace gallery.
Oh that sounds fun! Could include Zwirner and Hauser too and do a mega gallery show. I like it!
@@christopherwestpresents glad you like my idea! Also White Cube is a pretty huge one to include too!
He was best friends with Darby Barnard & Michael Fried at Princeton
I believe Frank graduated from Princeton?
He did! Sorry! I did change the description to reflect my mistake. Thanks so much for watching!
He went to Princeton 1:39
Yeah I corrected that in the description, but unfortunately no one reads the description. Thanks for watching!
Great videos on topics that are all too often given short shrift & on intriguing artists who are not widely known or appreciated (e.g. On Karawa, Meg Webster, Ed Clark, et al). So it pains me to say this, “always triple check all your facts.” The first term paper that I wrote for an art history class at Williams College was on Frank Stella’s Black Paintings (1958-1960), which he began when he was in his senior year at Princeton University, four of which were exhibited at MoMA in 1959 when Stella was just 23-years-old.
I updated the description re Princeton not Harvard. It was totally my mistake!
very, very...VERY well done Sir
So nice of you to say! And the comment is so appreciated.
"Anyone who wishes to discuss or explain art, should begin by cutting out their own tongue."
~~~ Matisse
How weird. I was just thinking about Stella yesterday and then this showed up in my feed and I thought TH-cam had read my mind. Hadn't heard he'd died.
I’m pretty sure google knows all our thoughts. Thanks so much for watching. And the comment!
Consider me a new subscriber. Thanks man.
I really appreciate it. Thanks so much!
I believe he attended Princeton not Harvard
You are correct. Thank you. I did make that correction in the description. My apologies for the error.
@@christopherwestpresents no apologies necessary! Keep up the great work…your videos are excellent
This was very interesting, subscribed. But please drop the annoying music.
Most seem to like it!
@@christopherwestpresents How do you know?
he went to Princeton, not Harvard.
Well shit. You’re totally right. As I was doing research, I came across an article that said Harvard - and unfortunately didn’t think about his college years again. Thanks for pointing that out. I will update the show notes.
@@christopherwestpresents He gave the Norton Lectures at Harvard. But that's another kettle of fish.
Il get a couple of Frank Frazzettas for those prices instead.
To each their own!
🍿👽
🍸😈
@@christopherwestpresents Ha! Touché my friend
Frank Stella didn’t go to Harvard; he went to Princeton. How can you make a video about such an influential person and get the facts wrong!!?
So sorry to offend you! I noted my mistake in the description long ago.