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Monday, May 4, 2026 |
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| Gagosian surveys four decades of Helen Frankenthaler's largest works |
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Helen Frankenthaler, A Green Thought in a Green Shade, 1981. Acrylic on canvas, 119 x 156 1/2 inches (302.3 x 397.5 cm) © 2026 Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, Inc./Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Photo: Thomas Barratt. Courtesy Gagosian.
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NEW YORK, NY.- Gagosian announced Helen Frankenthaler: The Moment and the Distance, an exhibition organized in collaboration with the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation. Surveying four decades of paintings from 1960 to 1992, the exhibition features more than twenty of Frankenthalers largest, most ambitious works. Arranged by decade, these canvaseswith their monumental scale, sensuous color, and innovative compositionsoffer new perspectives on the artists continual reinvention of her practice.
The exhibitions title is derived from an incisive 1975 essay by Barbara Guest, a poet and friend of the artist, who wrote: She has rewarded us with the astonishing combination of freedom with restraint, extravagance with discipline, suggestion and definition. The moment becomes the distance. Embodying Frankenthalers exploratory, lyrical approach to abstraction, the canvases on view benefit from an expansive scale that enhances the exceptional visual impact of their brilliant colors and varied gestures.
Created with diluted oil paint applied directly to untreated canvas, Provincetown I (1961) features compelling contrasts between line and color, bound and unbound form. In the late 1960s and 1970s, following her move from oil to acrylic paint, Frankenthaler shifted to composing with large, flat slabs of color. Mornings (1971) is distinguished by flowing descents of yellow, buff, and white tones interrupted by linear filaments drawn with black marker, which is also used in Thanksgiving (1972) to arrange biomorphic shapes in precarious balance.
Throughout her career, Frankenthaler engaged in a conversation with the history of art. Auguste (1977) was inspired by Auguste Renoir, reconfiguring the Impressionists fleshy palette and varied application into a field of loosely rectilinear brushstrokes. Allusions to landscape are also a constant in Frankenthalers oeuvre. Ocean Drive West #1 (1974), titled after the address of her seaside studio at Shippan Point in Stamford, Connecticut, stretches striated bands across a vibrant blue canvas to suggest currents, while the expansive horizontal composition of Shippan October (1981) evokes the seascape of the Long Island Sound in autumnal light.
Frankenthaler once described her painting as inner amorphous worlds or depths exploding on the surface and in perspective, channeling the fluidity of pigment that washes over works like A Green Thought in a Green Shade (1981), punctuated by opaque elements in contrasting colors. In Janus (1990), mirrored accumulations of layered gray tones face one another in the center of the work, framed by passages of fiery color and splattered, vaporous textures. Together, these paintings epitomize Frankenthalers continuous introduction of new painting techniques and imagery as well as her stalwart commitment to abstraction.
Gagosian is publishing a catalogue to accompany the exhibition. It features the essay Unborrowed Dreams: Helen Frankenthalers Post-Surrealist Spaces by Ara H. Merjian, which discusses the artists uniquely sustained engagement with abstraction and Surrealist methods. The gallerys tenth solo presentation of Frankenthalers work, The Moment and the Distance follows Helen Frankenthaler: A Grand Sweep at the Museum of Modern Art, New York (on view through February 8, 2026) and coincides with Helen Frankenthaler at Kunstmuseum Basel (April 18August 23, 2026), which will be the largest exhibition of her art to date in Europe.
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