
Robert Indiana
The Hartley Elegies: The Berlin Series, KVF I, 1990
serigraph
76 1/4 x 53 3/8 in.
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Beginning his career in the early 1960s in New York
as a member of the influential Coenties Slip group, which included
Ellsworth Kelly, Agnes Martin, James Rosenquist, and Jack Youngerman,
Robert Indiana is widely regarded as one of the most important painters,
sculptors, and printmakers working today. Perhaps most famous for his "LOVE" image,
which has appeared in prints, monumental sculpture, and postage stamps,
Indiana profoundly influenced Pop and Minimal Art as well as reductive
abstraction in the United States. Driven by a strong pacifist sensibility,
Indiana makes spare, powerful text-images that combine contemporary
social commentary with a keen awareness of the legacy of avant-garde
art. The ICA at MECA’s exhibition features the Hartley Elegies of 1990 and 1991, a powerful series of large-scale silkscreens inspired
by Maine-based painter Marsden Hartley’s famous 1914 painting
Portrait of a German Officer, a symbolic representation of a beloved
friend, Karl von Freyburg, who was killed in the First World War.
Born Robert Clark in New Castle, Indiana, in 1928, the artist studied
at art schools in Indianapolis and Utica, New York between 1945 and
1948, and at the Chicago Art Institute School and the Skowhegan School
of Painting and Sculpture, Maine, from 1949 to 1953. Indiana lives
and works in Vinalhaven, Maine. His work has been featured in numerous
international exhibitions.
A selection of prints produced at the Maine College of Art will also be on view.
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