
LARRY ZOX "META CENTER" DRAWING, 1965
Larry Zox (1937-2006) was a central figure in the evolution of 20th century abstraction in America.
Raised in Des Moines, Iowa, Zox studied at the University of Oklahoma and went on to work under the tutelage of modernist Georg Grosz at the Des Moines Art Centre. Zox moved to New York City and established his reputation by the mid 1960's. His studio was located on 20th Street and he was surrounded and inspired by a melting pot of jazz artists, bikers, and boxers.
By the mid 1960's, Zox arrived at his most recognized style, utilizing hard-edge shapes in bold colors to create geometric patterns, which were often realized on raw canvas. Zox was one of the most successful practitioners of hard-edge or geometric abstraction and not surprisingly was championed by Frank Stella, amongst others.
Larry Zox's hard-edge works offer blissful contemplation. "Meta Center" is a beautiful example of Zox's work during the mid-sixties from his iconic "Single File" series. Click here to see another fine example from this group.
Zox's hard-edge geometric creations from the late 1960's and early 1970's are arguably the most recognizable works from his oeuvre. Fittingly he had a retrospective at the Whitney Museum in 1973, that focused on such work. Today, numerous museums including the Whitney, the MoMA, the Tate and the Metropolitan all have examples of his work from this era in their permanent collections.
Questions about this piece? Contact us or call +1.416.704.1720
Signed and dated by the artist.
Mixed media on paper
USA, 1965
17"H 20.5"W (work)
20.5"H 25"W (framed)
Very good condition
Note: this work is sold unframed
Provenance: the Estate of Larry Zox
The last two pictures are from Caviar20's recent exhibition:
Larry Zox: 60's drawings
Larry Zox (1937-2006) was a central figure in the evolution of 20th century abstraction in America.
Raised in Des Moines, Iowa, Zox studied at the University of Oklahoma and went on to work under the tutelage of modernist Georg Grosz at the Des Moines Art Centre. Zox moved to New York City and established his reputation by the mid 1960's. His studio was located on 20th Street and he was surrounded and inspired by a melting pot of jazz artists, bikers, and boxers.
By the mid 1960's, Zox arrived at his most recognized style, utilizing hard-edge shapes in bold colors to create geometric patterns, which were often realized on raw canvas. Zox was one of the most successful practitioners of hard-edge or geometric abstraction and not surprisingly was championed by Frank Stella, amongst others.
Larry Zox's hard-edge works offer blissful contemplation. "Meta Center" is a beautiful example of Zox's work during the mid-sixties from his iconic "Single File" series. Click here to see another fine example from this group.
Zox's hard-edge geometric creations from the late 1960's and early 1970's are arguably the most recognizable works from his oeuvre. Fittingly he had a retrospective at the Whitney Museum in 1973, that focused on such work. Today, numerous museums including the Whitney, the MoMA, the Tate and the Metropolitan all have examples of his work from this era in their permanent collections.
Questions about this piece? Contact us or call +1.416.704.1720
Signed and dated by the artist.
Mixed media on paper
USA, 1965
17"H 20.5"W (work)
20.5"H 25"W (framed)
Very good condition
Note: this work is sold unframed
Provenance: the Estate of Larry Zox
The last two pictures are from Caviar20's recent exhibition:
Larry Zox: 60's drawings
Description
Larry Zox (1937-2006) was a central figure in the evolution of 20th century abstraction in America.
Raised in Des Moines, Iowa, Zox studied at the University of Oklahoma and went on to work under the tutelage of modernist Georg Grosz at the Des Moines Art Centre. Zox moved to New York City and established his reputation by the mid 1960's. His studio was located on 20th Street and he was surrounded and inspired by a melting pot of jazz artists, bikers, and boxers.
By the mid 1960's, Zox arrived at his most recognized style, utilizing hard-edge shapes in bold colors to create geometric patterns, which were often realized on raw canvas. Zox was one of the most successful practitioners of hard-edge or geometric abstraction and not surprisingly was championed by Frank Stella, amongst others.
Larry Zox's hard-edge works offer blissful contemplation. "Meta Center" is a beautiful example of Zox's work during the mid-sixties from his iconic "Single File" series. Click here to see another fine example from this group.
Zox's hard-edge geometric creations from the late 1960's and early 1970's are arguably the most recognizable works from his oeuvre. Fittingly he had a retrospective at the Whitney Museum in 1973, that focused on such work. Today, numerous museums including the Whitney, the MoMA, the Tate and the Metropolitan all have examples of his work from this era in their permanent collections.
Questions about this piece? Contact us or call +1.416.704.1720
Signed and dated by the artist.
Mixed media on paper
USA, 1965
17"H 20.5"W (work)
20.5"H 25"W (framed)
Very good condition
Note: this work is sold unframed
Provenance: the Estate of Larry Zox
The last two pictures are from Caviar20's recent exhibition:
Larry Zox: 60's drawings





















