128
128
c. 1960
acrylic on canvas 25 h × 32 w in (63 × 81 cm)
acrylic on canvas 25 h × 32 w in (63 × 81 cm)
estimate: $5,000–7,000
result: $7,500
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Signed to lower right 'Shaw'.
Charles Green Shaw 1892–1974
Charles Green Shaw was born into a wealthy family in New York City in 1892, but he was orphaned during childhood. After graduating from Yale University, Shaw studied architecture for one year at Columbia University. However, throughout the 1920s, Shaw became a successful freelance writer for The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, and other publications. His area of focus was cultural happenings around town. Shaw also produced poetry and novels during this period.
Once he took classes at the Art Students League, Shaw became a proponent of abstract art. He began to paint more during a stay in Paris in the early 1930s. Moving from Cubism to a simple, geometric style, Shaw developed a series of cityscapes with skyscrapers called Manhattan Motifs, which led to the irregularly shaped canvasses that he referred to as "plastic polygons."
Later in the 1930s, Shaw exhibited his burgeoning abstract oeuvre at various galleries in New York and Paris. Along with common painting materials, Shaw explored the potential of wood relief works. He hoped to open abstract art to three dimensions and consequently generated exploded views of various shapes. While continuing his artistic and critical efforts to expand the reach of abstract art, Shaw branched out into photography and children's books.
In the 1950s, Shaw gravitated toward Abstract Expressionism, but his style again grew more minimalist, yet graphically inclined, in the 1960s up to his death in 1974. His works today are part of various important collections, including those at the Art Institute of Chicago and the Guggenheim Museum and the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York.
Auction Results Charles Green Shaw