Ellsworth Kelly – Small Black Curve

Sale price€13.000,00

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Ellsworth Kelly (American, 1923-2015)

Small Black Curve, 1996-1997

Medium: Lithograph on BFK Rives

Dimensions: 56 × 63 cm (22 × 25 in)

Edition of 56: Hand-signed and numbered in pencil

Condition: Very good (sold framed)

This artwork ships worldwide.
Ellsworth Kelly - Small Black Curve

About this artwork

Ellsworth Kelly – Small Black Curve

Ellsworth Kelly's Small Black Curve (1996–1997) is a signed limited edition lithograph that distills his lifelong investigation of form, balance, and visual perception into a single, decisive gesture. A bold black curve arcs across the artwork's white surface, activating the surrounding space and creating a subtle sense of movement through its tension between weight and openness.

Produced to benefit the Guggenheim Museum, this fine art print exemplifies Kelly's belief that abstract shapes, drawn from observation rather than expression, could function as autonomous visual events. Through radical reduction, Small Black Curve demonstrates Kelly's mastery of how minimal means can generate profound spatial and emotional resonance.

Ellsworth Kelly - Braunwald

About Ellsworth Kelly

Ellsworth Kelly (1923–2015) was a seminal American painter, sculptor, and printmaker whose work played a defining role in the development of hard-edge painting, color field abstraction, and Minimalism. Renowned for his radical focus on line, color, and form, Kelly rejected expressive gesture in favor of clarity, precision, and visual autonomy, helping to reshape the language of postwar abstraction.

After several formative years in France following World War II, Kelly absorbed the influence of European modernists such as Kazimir Malevich, Paul Klee, and Constantin Brancusi. Rather than distancing himself from these traditions, he integrated them into a distinctly personal vocabulary based on what he described as an “impersonal observation of form.” Drawing inspiration from everyday visual encounters, including architectural fragments, plant shapes, shadows, and chance alignments, Kelly translated observed reality into bold, simplified compositions.

Across his paintings, sculptures, and fine art prints, Kelly explored shape as an independent subject, often using monochrome color fields, sharply defined edges, and innovative formats such as shaped canvases and multi-panel works. He famously stated, “Everywhere I looked, everything I saw became something to be made, and it had to be made exactly as it was, with nothing added.” This philosophy underscores a practice grounded in perception rather than expression, where form exists without symbolism or narrative.

Ellsworth Kelly’s artworks are represented in major museum collections worldwide, including the Museum of Modern Art, the Tate, and the Centre Pompidou. His prints and editions extend his rigorous investigation of color and form into collectible formats, making his enduring contribution to modern abstraction accessible beyond the canvas.

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