


Purple creature
1977
Purple Creature, a linocut from 1977, presents a vivid example of Hans Burkhardt's facility with graphic media, rendered in a format that balances raw, gestural energy with the deliberate physicality of the relief printing process. The composition centers on a boldly defined form alive with chromatic intensity, the purple tones carrying a psychological weight characteristic of an artist who consistently used color as a vehicle for emotional content rather than mere decoration. At 53.3 by 58.4 centimeters, the work occupies a scale that commands attention without overwhelming, and the sheet retains its integrity in good condition, bearing Burkhardt's signature as a mark of authorship on a work that stands as a confident expression of his mature graphic practice. Burkhardt's significance within twentieth century American art is inseparable from his biography as a Swiss emigre who arrived in New York in 1924, trained at Cooper Union and the Grand Central School of Art, and forged a close working relationship with Arshile Gorky over nearly a decade of shared studio life. Willem de Kooning was among the frequent visitors to that environment, situating Burkhardt at the very nucleus of what would become Abstract Expressionism. His subsequent relocation to Los Angeles in 1937 positioned him as a connective force between the coasts, and his sustained independence from prevailing trends, whether New York painterliness in the 1950s or California minimalism in the 1960s, only deepened the integrity of his vision. Critics including Donald Kuspit have identified him as the inventor of the abstract memento mori, and the comparison to Goya offered by Eugene Anderson reflects the moral seriousness that runs throughout his body of work. This particular impression carries the additional distinction of provenance from the collection of Dr. Aurelio de la Vega, the celebrated Cuban composer, conductor, and longtime professor at California State University, Northridge, who acquired the work during the 1970s. De la Vega's collection reflected the cultivated eye of a figure deeply embedded in Los Angeles cultural life, and his ownership of this print speaks to the esteem in which Burkhardt was held among the city's creative community during his own lifetime. Authenticity is unconditionally guaranteed and accompanied by a certificate of authenticity, making this an especially well-documented opportunity to acquire a signed original work by an artist whose place in the history of American modernism continues to attract serious scholarly and collector attention.
- Medium
- Linocut
- Sheet
- Signed
- Yes
- Spotted At
- Gallery · MLA Gallery
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