Lot Details & Additional Photographs
Oil on canvas, signed and dated 1944 at lower right, inscribed and dated to verso, retaining a 1956 loan label from the Minneapolis Institute of Art to the verso, presented in a House of Heydenryk gilt frame.
Stretcher size 30 x 38 1/2 in.
From the Collection of Mr. Charles Bolles Rogers, Minnesota and New York
Stanley William Hayter is an English born painter and printmaker. His early work tends toward the surreal, but by the 1940s he was embracing abstract expressionism.
In 1927, Hayter founded the
Atelier 17 studio in Paris, which championed the artistic possibilities of printmaking. Among the artists often found in the studio space were Pablo Picasso, Marc Chagall, Alberto Giacometti, Joan Miró, Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko and Wassily Kandisky. While the studio moved to New York in 1940, it returned to Paris in 1950. Following Hayter's death in 1988, it was renamed "Atelier Contrepoint" and remains in operation today.
Hayter's paintings and prints are in such prominent collections as Tate London; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C.; and North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh.
One inch horizontal tear to canvas in lower right quadrant; minor area of craquelure to purple pigment above center of composition; minor rubbing to frame.