American minimalist painter Frank Stella dies

American minimalist painter Frank Stella dies
American minimalist painter Frank Stella dies

File photo dated September 6, 2012 of American artist Frank Stella posing next to one of his works at the Museum of Arts in Wolfsburg, Germany.

Photo: EFE – MATTHIAS LEITZKE

The painter Frank Stella died at his home in New York on Saturday. According to his wife, Harriet McGurk, his cause of death was lymphoma. Stella is recognized for his early recognition, almost as soon as he completed his studies at Princeton University, thanks to his series ‘Black Paintings’, large-scale paintings consisting of dark stripes barely separated by lines of unpainted canvas, and which were contrasted with the abstract expressionism dominant in the 1950s.

As The Washington Post recalls, four of these works were included in the 1959 exhibition ‘Sixteen Americans’ at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, a group show in which Stella was the youngest artist. After this proposal, however, the painter changed his register and during the following years he created colorful works, some of them still with stripes, others with geometric figures.

Towards the end of the 1960s he embarked on the ambitious ‘Protractor’ project, a series of large paintings composed of overlapping semicircles of bright colours.

Little given to explaining his works, in the following decades his work extended to sculpture and even design, with commissions from public and private entities, such as the one he did for the Los Angeles Gas Company Tower, in California.

Who was Fran Stella?

Son of Frank and Constance Stella, he a gynecologist and she a landscape painter, Frank Philip Stella was born on May 12, 1936 in Malden, Massachusetts. After completing his history degree at Princeton, he got a studio in Manhattan, where, while painting houses, he began working on his dark-toned paintings.

In 1961 he married Barbara Rose, who would become a renowned art critic and whom he divorced in 1969 (she died in 2020, according to The New York Times).

With her he had two children, Rachel and , and with his next wife, McGurk, a pediatrician whom he married in 1978, he had two more, Patrick and Peter.

In addition to five grandchildren, he is also survived by Laura, a daughter he had from his relationship with Shirley De Lemos Wyse, with whom he was in the period between his two marriages.

 
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