The Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg (Germany) hosts a retrospective devoted to Frank Stella (born 1936), one of the last living heroes of American painting from the 1950s and 1960s. Stella’s recent works demonstrate yet again his compelling path in the direction of abstraction.
Hardly twenty-years old, the young artist conquered the New York art scene in the late 1950s with a sensation: His large Black Paintings not only intensified the debate on Minimalism in painting but also prepared the way for the “exit from the picture into space.” But unlike his contemporaries, Stella took a completely independent path that led him to ever more opulent, ever more baroque reliefs.
With his turn “from Minimalism to Maximalism,” Frank Stella developed into one of the most distinctive artists of the 20th century. Featuring circa 63 mostly large-format works as well as 82 drawings and sketches, the Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg is honoring Frank Stella with a comprehensive exhibition that makes up the capstone to the wide range of presentations celebrating the artist’s 75th birthday.
Dates: from September 8 to January 20.
Location: Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg. Hollerplatz 1, 38440 Wolfsburg. Germany.
Opening hours: from Wednesday to Sunday from 11am to 6pm. Tuesday from 11am to 8pm.