
Pace will present an exhibition of late paintings, works on paper, and sculpture by Adolph Gottlieb at its 540 West 25th Street gallery in New York from November 14 to December 21.
The show will spotlight paintings created by the artist in the final years of his life, including the largest canvas he ever produced, Triptych (1971), a rarely exhibited three-panel composition. Holistically, this presentation will shed light on the intense ambition and formal refinement that motivated Gottlieb’s practice in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
Adolph Gottlieb (b. 1903, New York; d. 1974, New York) worked his passage to Europe when he was seventeen, after studying briefly at The Art Students League. He spent six months in Paris visiting the Louvre every day and auditing classes at the Academie de la Grande Chaumiere. Gottlieb made his solo debut in 1930. In 1935, he became a founding member of ‘The Ten,’ group of artists devoted to expressionist and abstract painting. Eight years later, he would become a founding member of another group of abstract painters, ‘The New York Artist Painters,’ that included Mark Rothko, John Graham, and George L. K. Morris. In 1943, Gottlieb co-authored and published a letter with Rothko in The New York Times, expressing what is now considered to be the first formal statement of the concerns of the Abstract Expressionist artists. Pace Gallery has represented Gottlieb’s estate since 2001.




Pace is a leading international art gallery representing some of the most influential artists and estates of the 20th and 21st centuries, founded by Arne Glimcher in 1960.

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