American artist Frank Stella</a>, opening November 13th 2016. Known for his pioneering minimalism and post-painterly abstraction, this extraordinary collection of works represents Stella’s heroic refutation of the moribund dialogue of the death of painting and refusal of the spiritualist discourse of abstraction. The artist seeks instead to supplant the illusionist window of the canvas with the literalist production of space in collaged, often high contrast aggressive forms—engaging as well as unsettling the viewer.</p><p>First rising to international recognition with his early series of Black Paintings (1958-1960), which founded the discourse of minimalism from the 1960s onward, by the late 1970s and early 1980s, Frank Stella pursued a practice to push the limits of the pictorial, exploding the bounds of the canvas in high-relief works which strove to paint without painting. This often led to experimentation not only in form, but also material. On a 1983 trip to Malta, in advance of his much celebrated series of lectures of Harvard University, entitled Working Space (compiled in a book of the name), Stella was influenced by the isle’s fortified architecture. The resulting Malta series, of which Zejtun (1983) is a part, is, like Blyvoors (1982), composed in honeycombed aluminum, continuing the artist’s previous use of metal forms to effectively attempt to both address and move beyond the bounds of painting: giving attention to edge and preserving the effects of the tableau while pursuing the continual materialization of space which has marked the trajectory of his entire oeuvre.</p><p>Also on display, Giufa E La Berreta Rossa (1985) (Giufa and the Red Beret) along with La Scienza della Fiacca, 3.5x (1984) (The science of laziness, or The science of doing nothing) are each seminal expressions of Stella’s willful rejection of the common conceit that abstraction necessarily commands reduction; rather in a gesture towards narrative allusion in literalist space, here Stella presents dynamic studies in the limits of pictorial form—exploring, as Michael Auping notes for the artist’s 2015 Whitney retrospective, “how much information he can load into abstraction.” Taking inspiration from Paul Cézanne’s famed admonishment to “Treat nature by the cylinder, the sphere, the cone,” continuing, “everything in proper perspective so that each side of an object or a plane is directed towards a central point,” both works belong to Stella’s aptly named Cones and Pillars series (1984-1987), a bricolage of cyclical projections whose movement and instability is underlined by the continuous perspectival redirection of each collaged form. The artist calls the series itself, “a battle of forms fighting for position in the paintings”, which also owe a debt to a late 19th century diagrammatic drawing in an architectural treatise on classical stonecutting. Here the stones float, protruding with both illusionist depth and literal vibrancy in a high contrast conflict of form. The artist also turns to his own Italian heritage naming each work after a chapter in Italio Calvino’s Italian Folktales, themselves recounting ancient lore. In the former case, ‘Giufa and the Red Beret’ recounts a fool cycle from Sicily, believed to be of Arab origin, while in the latter, ‘The science of laziness’ relates the desire of a Turkish father, averse to labor, to have his son receive an education in the art of doing nothing.</p><p>Such storied, layered multivalence of form and meaning, Stella brings forward in his heroic Moby Dick series (1986-1997), represented here in the mixed media maquette, The Honor and Glory of Whaling (1991), one of several hundred works completed by Stella representing the 135 chapters of Melville’s classic narrative. As though a metaphor for Stella’s own Ahab-like unrelenting struggle against mythical weight of abstraction’s limits as well as the limits of the picture plane, these physical, gestural works reveal a composition of ever more organic, dynamic forms.</p><p><br></p>" />

Frank Stella

Nov 13, 2016 - Jan 04, 2017

Leila Heller Gallery Dubai is pleased to announce an exhibition of six large-scale, high-relief works by American artist Frank Stella, opening November 13th 2016. Known for his pioneering minimalism and post-painterly abstraction, this extraordinary collection of works represents Stella’s heroic refutation of the moribund dialogue of the death of painting and refusal of the spiritualist discourse of abstraction. The artist seeks instead to supplant the illusionist window of the canvas with the literalist production of space in collaged, often high contrast aggressive forms—engaging as well as unsettling the viewer.

First rising to international recognition with his early series of Black Paintings (1958-1960), which founded the discourse of minimalism from the 1960s onward, by the late 1970s and early 1980s, Frank Stella pursued a practice to push the limits of the pictorial, exploding the bounds of the canvas in high-relief works which strove to paint without painting. This often led to experimentation not only in form, but also material. On a 1983 trip to Malta, in advance of his much celebrated series of lectures of Harvard University, entitled Working Space (compiled in a book of the name), Stella was influenced by the isle’s fortified architecture. The resulting Malta series, of which Zejtun (1983) is a part, is, like Blyvoors (1982), composed in honeycombed aluminum, continuing the artist’s previous use of metal forms to effectively attempt to both address and move beyond the bounds of painting: giving attention to edge and preserving the effects of the tableau while pursuing the continual materialization of space which has marked the trajectory of his entire oeuvre.

Also on display, Giufa E La Berreta Rossa (1985) (Giufa and the Red Beret) along with La Scienza della Fiacca, 3.5x (1984) (The science of laziness, or The science of doing nothing) are each seminal expressions of Stella’s willful rejection of the common conceit that abstraction necessarily commands reduction; rather in a gesture towards narrative allusion in literalist space, here Stella presents dynamic studies in the limits of pictorial form—exploring, as Michael Auping notes for the artist’s 2015 Whitney retrospective, “how much information he can load into abstraction.” Taking inspiration from Paul Cézanne’s famed admonishment to “Treat nature by the cylinder, the sphere, the cone,” continuing, “everything in proper perspective so that each side of an object or a plane is directed towards a central point,” both works belong to Stella’s aptly named Cones and Pillars series (1984-1987), a bricolage of cyclical projections whose movement and instability is underlined by the continuous perspectival redirection of each collaged form. The artist calls the series itself, “a battle of forms fighting for position in the paintings”, which also owe a debt to a late 19th century diagrammatic drawing in an architectural treatise on classical stonecutting. Here the stones float, protruding with both illusionist depth and literal vibrancy in a high contrast conflict of form. The artist also turns to his own Italian heritage naming each work after a chapter in Italio Calvino’s Italian Folktales, themselves recounting ancient lore. In the former case, ‘Giufa and the Red Beret’ recounts a fool cycle from Sicily, believed to be of Arab origin, while in the latter, ‘The science of laziness’ relates the desire of a Turkish father, averse to labor, to have his son receive an education in the art of doing nothing.

Such storied, layered multivalence of form and meaning, Stella brings forward in his heroic Moby Dick series (1986-1997), represented here in the mixed media maquette, The Honor and Glory of Whaling (1991), one of several hundred works completed by Stella representing the 135 chapters of Melville’s classic narrative. As though a metaphor for Stella’s own Ahab-like unrelenting struggle against mythical weight of abstraction’s limits as well as the limits of the picture plane, these physical, gestural works reveal a composition of ever more organic, dynamic forms.



Leila Heller Gallery Dubai is pleased to announce an exhibition of six large-scale, high-relief works by American artist Frank Stella, opening November 13th 2016. Known for his pioneering minimalism and post-painterly abstraction, this extraordinary collection of works represents Stella’s heroic refutation of the moribund dialogue of the death of painting and refusal of the spiritualist discourse of abstraction. The artist seeks instead to supplant the illusionist window of the canvas with the literalist production of space in collaged, often high contrast aggressive forms—engaging as well as unsettling the viewer.

First rising to international recognition with his early series of Black Paintings (1958-1960), which founded the discourse of minimalism from the 1960s onward, by the late 1970s and early 1980s, Frank Stella pursued a practice to push the limits of the pictorial, exploding the bounds of the canvas in high-relief works which strove to paint without painting. This often led to experimentation not only in form, but also material. On a 1983 trip to Malta, in advance of his much celebrated series of lectures of Harvard University, entitled Working Space (compiled in a book of the name), Stella was influenced by the isle’s fortified architecture. The resulting Malta series, of which Zejtun (1983) is a part, is, like Blyvoors (1982), composed in honeycombed aluminum, continuing the artist’s previous use of metal forms to effectively attempt to both address and move beyond the bounds of painting: giving attention to edge and preserving the effects of the tableau while pursuing the continual materialization of space which has marked the trajectory of his entire oeuvre.

Also on display, Giufa E La Berreta Rossa (1985) (Giufa and the Red Beret) along with La Scienza della Fiacca, 3.5x (1984) (The science of laziness, or The science of doing nothing) are each seminal expressions of Stella’s willful rejection of the common conceit that abstraction necessarily commands reduction; rather in a gesture towards narrative allusion in literalist space, here Stella presents dynamic studies in the limits of pictorial form—exploring, as Michael Auping notes for the artist’s 2015 Whitney retrospective, “how much information he can load into abstraction.” Taking inspiration from Paul Cézanne’s famed admonishment to “Treat nature by the cylinder, the sphere, the cone,” continuing, “everything in proper perspective so that each side of an object or a plane is directed towards a central point,” both works belong to Stella’s aptly named Cones and Pillars series (1984-1987), a bricolage of cyclical projections whose movement and instability is underlined by the continuous perspectival redirection of each collaged form. The artist calls the series itself, “a battle of forms fighting for position in the paintings”, which also owe a debt to a late 19th century diagrammatic drawing in an architectural treatise on classical stonecutting. Here the stones float, protruding with both illusionist depth and literal vibrancy in a high contrast conflict of form. The artist also turns to his own Italian heritage naming each work after a chapter in Italio Calvino’s Italian Folktales, themselves recounting ancient lore. In the former case, ‘Giufa and the Red Beret’ recounts a fool cycle from Sicily, believed to be of Arab origin, while in the latter, ‘The science of laziness’ relates the desire of a Turkish father, averse to labor, to have his son receive an education in the art of doing nothing.

Such storied, layered multivalence of form and meaning, Stella brings forward in his heroic Moby Dick series (1986-1997), represented here in the mixed media maquette, The Honor and Glory of Whaling (1991), one of several hundred works completed by Stella representing the 135 chapters of Melville’s classic narrative. As though a metaphor for Stella’s own Ahab-like unrelenting struggle against mythical weight of abstraction’s limits as well as the limits of the picture plane, these physical, gestural works reveal a composition of ever more organic, dynamic forms.



Artists on show

Contact details

I-87, Alserkal Avenue Al Quoz - Dubai, United Arab Emirates PO Box 413991

What's on nearby

Collishaw explores the intersection of nature’s evolutionary processes and artificial intelligence, examining how life’s instincts and behaviors can be manipulated. Building on his earlier explorations of the “evolutionary arms race” — the cycle of behaviors driving survival and reproduction — Collishaw focuses on AI’s potential to simulate and accelerate these patterns. His new tapestry works redefine floral forms, hybridizing species and evolving their digital DNA into increasingly complex and imaginative creations.<p>While technology is central to Alluvion, the series also pays homage to centuries-old craftsmanship. Collishaw harnesses artificial intelligence to generate intricate botanical forms inspired by the Old Masters, then materializes these digital visions through traditional weaving techniques. He employs the jacquard loom—a method refined in the 19th century but rooted in medieval textile traditions—to translate his AI-generated imagery. Notably, the jacquard loom was the first to use punchcard software, producing the earliest ‘digital images’ over 200 years ago. This pioneering system later influenced the development of modern computing, making Collishaw’s choice of medium particularly resonant: his works bridge the origins of digital technology with its latest evolution in AI.</p><p>Despite its technological foundations, Alluvion also nods to art historical giants such as Hieronymus Bosch, Georgia O’Keeffe, and Salvador Dalí. Collishaw fuses de Heem’s meticulous still lifes, O’Keeffe’s bold abstractions, and Dalí’s surreal dreamscapes to create hybridized, AI-generated flora. The result is a surrealism so seamlessly entwined with reality that the boundary between them dissolves.</p><p><br></p><p>In his latest — Alluvion — series Mat Collishaw explores the intersection of nature’s evolutionary processes and artificial intelligence, examining how life’s instincts and behaviors can be manipulated. Building on his earlier explorations of the “evolutionary arms race” — the cycle of behaviors driving survival and reproduction — Collishaw focuses on AI’s potential to simulate and accelerate these patterns. His new tapestry works redefine floral forms, hybridizing species and evolving their digital DNA into increasingly complex and imaginative creations.</p><p>While technology is central to Alluvion, the series also pays homage to centuries-old craftsmanship. Collishaw harnesses artificial intelligence to generate intricate botanical forms inspired by the Old Masters, then materializes these digital visions through traditional weaving techniques. He employs the jacquard loom—a method refined in the 19th century but rooted in medieval textile traditions—to translate his AI-generated imagery. Notably, the jacquard loom was the first to use punchcard software, producing the earliest ‘digital images’ over 200 years ago. This pioneering system later influenced the development of modern computing, making Collishaw’s choice of medium particularly resonant: his works bridge the origins of digital technology with its latest evolution in AI.</p><p>Despite its technological foundations, Alluvion also nods to art historical giants such as Hieronymus Bosch, Georgia O’Keeffe, and Salvador Dalí. Collishaw fuses de Heem’s meticulous still lifes, O’Keeffe’s bold abstractions, and Dalí’s surreal dreamscapes to create hybridized, AI-generated flora. The result is a surrealism so seamlessly entwined with reality that the boundary between them dissolves.</p><p>Collishaw’s tapestry series draws from the tradition of medieval woven artworks, where depictions of flora carried deep symbolic and spiritual meaning. Flowers, leaves, and vines were not merely decorative but served as allegories of life, renewal, transience, and the passage of time. Meticulously woven, these botanical motifs functioned both as studies of nature and as reflections on humanity’s relationship with the natural world. Collishaw extends this legacy, infusing his approach to color, form, and narrative with the essence of this historical tradition.</p><p><br></p><p>In his latest — Alluvion — series Mat Collishaw explores the intersection of nature’s evolutionary processes and artificial intelligence, examining how life’s instincts and behaviors can be manipulated. Building on his earlier explorations of the “evolutionary arms race” — the cycle of behaviors driving survival and reproduction — Collishaw focuses on AI’s potential to simulate and accelerate these patterns. His new tapestry works redefine floral forms, hybridizing species and evolving their digital DNA into increasingly complex and imaginative creations.</p><p>While technology is central to Alluvion, the series also pays homage to centuries-old craftsmanship. 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