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Helen Frankenthaler: Prints 1977–2004

Helen Frankenthaler: Prints 1977–2004
Helen Frankenthaler, Madame Butterfly, 2000, 102 colour woodcut from 46 woodblocks on TGL handmade paper (triptych), 106 x 201.9 cm (artwork). © 2024 Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, Inc. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / Tyler Graphics Ltd., Mount Kisco, New York. Collection of the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, New York.
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Helen Frankenthaler: Prints 1977–2004
29 June 2024 — 25 August 2024
STPI Creative Workshop and Gallery
41 Robertson Quay
Singapore 238236

STPI – Creative Workshop & Gallery is proud to present their 2024 Annual Special Exhibition, Helen Frankenthaler: Prints 1977–2004, a showcase of the prolific printmaking practice of the late, esteemed artist Helen Frankenthaler (1928–2011), one of the most prominent modern American abstract expressionist artists of her time.

Helen Frankenthaler: Prints 1977–2004
Helen Frankenthaler, Gateway (Screen), 1988, 28 colour etching, relief, aquatint and stencil
on TGL handmade paper mounted in a hand-patinated cast bronze screen (three panels),
205.7 x 251.5 x 172.1 cm. © 2024 Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, Inc. / Artists Rights
Society (ARS), New York / Tyler Graphics Ltd., Mount Kisco, New York. Collection of Singapore
Art Museum, comprising part of the National Collection of Singapore.

Running from 29 June to 25 August 2024, the exhibition introduces close to 40 of her print works from the National Collection of Singapore and the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, New York – one of the largest to be shown in Singapore and with a spotlight on her woodcuts. In a rare opportunity to encounter these outstanding works up close, this special exhibition will explore Frankenthaler’s influential and collaborative partnership with American master printer Kenneth Tyler, who would later become a significant figure in the establishment of STPI. 

Internationally celebrated as a pioneer of Colour Field painting within the Abstract Expressionism movement, Frankenthaler was also a notable printmaker who made significant contributions to the American Print Renaissance. Her 26-year-long collaboration with Tyler at his workshop, Tyler Graphics, began in 1976. It was a legendary print shop in New York that embodied many of the philosophies reflected in the STPI Creative Workshop today: a space for innovation and collaboration with artists to spark new creative possibilities in printmaking.

“This exhibition celebrates Helen Frankenthaler as an artist and trailblazer, one who constantly sought to materialise new creative possibilities. With a collaborative spirit that is deeply rooted in STPI’s residency programme today, Frankenthaler’s 26-year artistic partnership with Ken Tyler redefined her own printmaking practice to capture her signature symphony of colours and fluid abstractions, producing the many ground-breaking works featured in this exhibition.”

– Elizabeth Smith, Executive Director of the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation

Helen Frankenthaler: Prints 1977–2004
Helen Frankenthaler, Madame Butterfly, 2000, 102 colour woodcut from 46 woodblocks on TGL handmade paper (triptych), 106 x 201.9 cm (artwork). © 2024 Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, Inc. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / Tyler Graphics Ltd., Mount Kisco, New York. Collection of the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, New York.

Highlights on show include Madame Butterfly, an elegant woodcut masterpiece influenced by East and West printmaking styles to create a triptych featuring 102 different tones. Her mastery of colour produced a cloud-like effect imbued with strength and serenity, a demonstration of how she challenged the woodcut medium to create a work that feels “born at once”. Though it shares a title with Puccini’s iconic opera, this piece deftly invites the viewer to peel back the layers of meaning to discover their own personal interpretations.

One of her most ambitious multimedia projects to date, Frankenthaler worked with Tyler to create Gateway over a seven-year period from 1982–1988, pushing the boundaries of printmaking and scale. Starting with intaglio prints that later evolved into bronze screens, she utilised print techniques such as etching, relief, aquatint, and spitbite aquatint with hand-stencilled margins on three panels. The Gateway series created a nuanced dialogue between her artistic practice and the material, resulting in a multi-disciplinary tour de force that captures the sublime nature of her work.

In Helen Frankenthaler: Prints 1977–2004, Frankenthaler’s daring experimentation and expressionistic visual vocabulary shines in tandem with the technical mastery afforded by her collaboration with Tyler Graphics. The same philosophy of building creative partnerships that challenge boundaries continues at STPI to this day, empowering artists in residencies to reinvent the conventions of print and paper.

Helen Frankenthaler: Prints 1977–2004
Helen Frankenthaler, Geisha, 2003, 23 colour woodcut from 14 woodblocks on Torinoko paper, mounted on paper, 96.5 x 66.4 cm (artwork). © 2024 Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, Inc. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / Pace Editions, Inc. / New York. Collection of the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, New York.

About the STPI Annual Special Exhibition

The STPI Annual Special Exhibition features a highly anticipated exhibition that offers audiences a rare opportunity to encounter remarkable printmaking and papermaking explorations of some of the most significant modern and contemporary artists in history. Specially curated to highlight and foster an appreciation for the artists’ exceptional artistry and innovations in these mediums, each edition echoes STPI’s spirit of collaboration and the bold experimentations that take place in STPI’s Creative Workshop.

STPI is proud to have presented the works of many influential artists over the last two decades, including The Mystery of Picasso’s Creative Process: The Art of Printmaking (2013), Zao Wou-Ki: No Boundaries (2016), David Hockney: A Matter of Perspective (2017), and Takashi Murakami: From Superflat to Bubblewrap (2019)

Helen Frankenthaler: Prints 1977–2004 Opens on the 29th of June 2024 until the 25th of August 2024 at STPI Creative Workshop and Gallery

©2024 STPI Creative Workshop and Gallery