BASEL.- The Kunstmuseum Basel presents works by the American artist Frank Stella. Hosted by the Museum für Gegenwartskunst, the exhibition Frank Stella Paintings & Drawings primarily features selections from the museums own exceptionally rich holdings of Stellas art. It is curated by Anita Haldemann, curator and interim head of the Kunstmuseum Basels Kupferstichkabinett (Department of Prints and Drawings). The Kunstmuseum Basels main building remains closed for renovations and construction work until mid-April 2016.
In 1959, a newcomer in his early twenties takes New Yorks art scene by storm: the American Frank Stella (b. 1936). The sensational Black Paintings he creates that year, including Morro Castle, now in Basel, are radically abstract. Stella renounces all illusion of space and depth, obliterating the distinction between figure and ground. Emphasizing the flatness of the canvas, he highlights its objecthood. Stella sees himself as a member of the first generation of artists for whom the possibility of abstract painting is an undisputable option, and he even believes it is the only way forward for an ambitious painterly practice in the postwar era.
The majority of the works in the exhibition at the Museum für Gegenwartskunst come from the Kunstmuseums own extraordinarily rich holdings. They illustrate the early stages of Stellas output, beginning in 1958 with the paintings West Broadway and Seward Park, which anticipate the Black Paintings of 1959. In the 1960s, the Shaped Canvases represent a crucial next step in the ongoing evolution of Stellas conception of the picture. The outer contours of these works relate closely to the structures within them, giving rise to a novel correspondence between painting and pictorial format.
Between 1967 and 1971, Frank Stella created the Protractor Series, including our Damascus Gate. Variation I (1969/1970). The collective title derives from the circular device, known as a protractor, that Stella used to design the paintings shapes. Arpoador I (1975) exemplifies the transition to the painted aluminum relief, a support Stella introduced in the Brazilian Series (19741975).
The second part of the exhibition presents Stellas works on paper; the Kupferstichkabinett holds more than 350 of the artists drawings. The display showcases a concise selection of 115 works. They should be read as working drawings: sketches, diagrams and preparatory studies. In contrast with the large formats of his paintings, Stella drew on small sheets that now reveal nascent ideas and the evolving compositional invention. Many of the drawings also indicate corrective interventions and modifications and include notes and specifications of color. They provide insight into the creative process and the larger development of artistic ideas in Stellas oeuvre.