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"Color is my form, and I'm interested in how color moves and interacts."
– Stanley Whitney
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Stanley Whitney. Untitled, 1999 (detail) © Gary Tatintsian Gallery and the artist
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Untitled, 1999 painting exemplifies Stanley Whitney’s renowned color grid series, where the artist delves into the expressive potential of color. The vibrant blocks captivate the viewer, pulsating with an energy and rhythm that seem to dance off the canvas—simultaneously advancing and retreating, expanding and contracting before the observer’s eyes.
“Stanley Whitney has energized abstraction for himself and others by using saturated color and the Modernist grid for their mutual reinvention. In so doing, he has devised an improvisatory, enriched Minimalism, whose hard edges, ruled lines and predetermined systems have been loosened and destabilized, whose colors are more random — all of which gives the viewer an immense amount to look at and mull over.”
— Roberta Smith, “Review: Stanley Whitney’s paintings reinvent the grid”, The New York Times.
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Whitney’s solid grids emulate stable structures that remain rhythmic, spontaneous, and erratic in nature. Rather than serving as a proscriptive framework, the grid formation acts as a liberating compositional tool, enabling improvisation through color and texture.
The chromatic rectangular and square compositions in Whitney’s work recall Jasper Johns' False Start (1959) and Piet Mondrian's Composition A With Black, Red, Grey, Yellow And Blue (1919), contextualizing the broader development of geometric abstraction in the 20th century. With its loose brushstrokes and musical tonality, the work also evokes Romare Bearden's painting Jazz Village (1967) which presents vivid rhythmic patterns that echo the improvisational energy of jazz, suggesting different but complementary explorations of color and form.
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Stanley Whitney in his Rome studio, 1994. Photo by Athina Ionia © Stanley Whitney
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Installation shots from the artist’s personal exhibitions: How High the Moon at the Buffalo AKG Art Museum, New York, in 2024,and The Italian Paintings at Palazzo Tiepolo Passi, Venice, in 2022
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Stanley Whitney © Gabriela Bhaskar
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Viewing Rooms
Viewing Room | Stanley Whitney. Untitled, 1999
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