AD REINHARDT (1913-1967)
AD REINHARDT (1913-1967)
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Property from the Collection of the Frances Hamilton White Trust
AD REINHARDT (1913-1967)

Untitled

Details
AD REINHARDT (1913-1967)
Untitled
incised with the artist's signature and date '1940 Ad Reinhardt' (lower right)
oil, gouache and paper collage on cardboard
8 ½ x 10 3/8 in. (21.6 x 26.4 cm.)
Executed in 1940.
Provenance
Rita Reinhardt, New York
Andrew Crispo Gallery, New York
C.P. Abod, Bethesda
Their sale; Sotheby's, New York, 15 May 1998, lot 70
Knoedler & Company, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 2000
Literature
L. Lippard, Ad Reinhardt, New York, 1981, pp. 37 and 39, pl. 5 (illustrated).
Exhibited
New York, Andrew Crispo Gallery, Twelve Americans: Masters of Collage, November-December 1977, no. 154.
New York, Knoedler & Company, Pasted Pictures: Collage and Abstraction in the Twentieth Century, February-March 2000, no. 14.

Brought to you by

Isabella Lauria
Isabella Lauria Vice President, Senior Specialist, Head of 21st Century Evening Sale

Lot Essay

“A surviving transitional work (pl. 5) is a small, delicately colored painting in which the underlying collage (painted paper) elements are veiled by an overlay of gouache. ...The broad ribbony strokes can be seen as vestiges of [Stuart] Davis's influence, but they also anticipate by several years a similar use of flat calligraphy by Adolph Gottlieb and Bradley Walker Tomlin.”
—L. Lippard, Ad Reinhardt, New York, 1981, p. 39.

About the Collector:

Throughout her long and fruitful life, Frances Hamilton White (1933-2021) made an immeasurable impact both on the people with whom she surrounded herself and those who never knew her. Growing up in West Virginia, it was not long before Frances found her destined home on the West Coast, moving first to La Mesa in Southern California before settling a few miles north in Cardiff. Taking an interest less in any one philanthropic cause and more in humanity as a whole, Frances ensured the existence of the Hamilton Glaucoma Center at the Shiley Eye Institute of UC San Diego, jumpstarted a home-delivered meal service for patients affected by terminal illness, saw to the ongoing educational initiatives of institutions meaningful to her locale and dedicated herself to nature’s healing power through the Nature Collective. In all this, Frances still found time to appreciate visual culture, intentionally supporting artists native to her adopted state and sitting on the board of the Mingei International Museum in San Diego. A faithful patron of the Paul Thiebaud Gallery in San Francisco, Frances collected widely, often buying directly from the artists’ studio, as in the case of the spectacular Thiebauds in her collection. Public donations aside, Frances is remembered as a delightful person, loved by those who had the pleasure of coming into her orbit. Frances’s legacy, thus, is one of committed kindness to a community of creators about which she deeply cared.

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