Rupprecht Geiger – Leuchtrot Orange - Leuchtrot Warm

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Rupprecht Geiger (German, 1908-2009)

Leuchtrot Orange - Leuchtrot Warm, 1965

Medium: Screenprint on wove paper

Dimensions: 56 x 45 cm (22 × 17.8 in)

Edition of 100 (C): Hand-signed and numbered in pencil

Catalogue raisonné: WVG 79

Condition: Very good

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About this artwork

Rupprecht Geiger – Leuchtrot Orange - Leuchtrot Warm

Rupprecht Geiger's Leuchtrot Orange – Leuchtrot Warm (1965) is a signed screenprint that exemplifies his systematic exploration of color as an autonomous visual force. A luminous magenta rectangle hovers against a gradient ground that transitions from vibrant orange to warm yellow, the interplay of hues generating an almost palpable sense of spatial depth and warmth.

Geiger's color relationships operate without representational reference — the emotional and perceptual intensity resides entirely in the interaction between forms and chromatic intensity. 

Created during the height of European Color Field abstraction, this limited edition print stands as a concentrated statement of Geiger's conviction that color itself is the primary subject of painting.

Rupprecht Geiger - Zurückgehen, Weitergehen, Fortgehen

About Rupprecht Geiger

Rupprecht Geiger (German, 1908–2009) was a leading figure of postwar abstraction and Colour Field painting, internationally recognised for his radiant monochromes and hard-edged geometric artworks. The son of painter Willi Geiger, he worked across architecture, painting, sculpture, and printmaking before dedicating himself fully to the exploration of colour as an autonomous pictorial force.

Geiger's artworks are defined by precise geometric forms and an intense chromatic vocabulary — most notably his iconic reds. For Geiger, red was not merely a formal choice but a symbol of vitality, energy, and presence. Across paintings and limited edition screenprints, he investigated how colour alone could generate spatial depth and emotional resonance, positioning his practice at the forefront of non-objective art in postwar Germany. His screenprints, in particular, allowed him to achieve the chromatic intensity and geometric precision that define his work in a collectible, editioned format.

In 1949, together with Willi Baumeister and Fritz Winter, Geiger co-founded the artist group Zen 49 in Munich, which played a decisive role in reestablishing abstract art in Germany after World War II. By the early 1960s, he concentrated exclusively on painting and printmaking, producing a body of artworks and fine art prints that remain central to European Colour Field abstraction.

Rupprecht Geiger participated in documenta 2, 3, 4, and 6, and exhibited at the Museum for Non-Objective Painting — later the Guggenheim Museum, New York. Major retrospectives at the Neue Nationalgalerie in Berlin and the Lenbachhaus in Munich confirmed his enduring significance within twentieth-century art.

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