Artists on Ad
Black Painting
The black painting that I own is made up of dark brown, green, and dark violet. Those paintings are very hard to see. You often hear collectors moan about their lighting, and how much it costs them to light the painting. Obviously, it costs some of them more than it cost to buy the painting. But Reinhardt, I think, is interested in the opposite [of what I am], in terms of direct painting. I like a painting that you can see right away, something that fixes itself on your visual, not so much your imagination, just what you see. And Reinhardt is making something closer to an impressionistic
idea. He wants you to see a kind of glow, he wants the painting to sort of vibrate, down at a very, very low pitch. The ideal place to see Reinhardt’s paintings is in the studio. He has a very nice big open window, with sort of indirect daylight, and the ideal time, as he’ll tell you, is to come in the late afternoon, when the light is just right, and you can see his paintings very well. They’re quite clear, and they do vibrate, and the color is really beautiful. They’re almost impossible to light anywhere else. The show that he had, a very beautiful show, at Betty Parsons, was just hideous, you really couldn’t see…you were just too conscious of the mechanical lighting.
An edited version of an Irving Sandler interview with Frank Stella, October 26, 1962. Irving Sandler Papers, Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles.
Contributor
Frank StellaFRANK STELLA is an American artist based in New York.
RECOMMENDED ARTICLES

Frank Stella: From the Studio
By David CarrierJUNE 2023 | ArtSeen
By now, Frank Stellas illustrious, long career is very well documented. We know by heart the story of his early development of proto-minimalism; his transition to making elaborate decorative paintings; and his construction of metallic relief sculptures. And of course we have his fine, highly personal book, Working Space (1986), which relates that development to the prior history of early modernism. The story of Stellas art is, arguably, the story of late twentieth-century American painting. What more can he possibly do at this point? And how might his style in old age add to our picture of this artistic period?
Elaine Reichek: Material Girl
By Norman L KleeblattAPRIL 2022 | ArtSeen
Elaine Reichek scavenges among sources from literature, history, mythology, and art, fabricating images and texts she transforms into textiles. Trained as a painter by avant-garde, intellectually rigorous icons, notably Ad Reinhardt, her career has been defined by her strategic use of the textile mediuma feminist, postmodern strategy.