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Barnett Newman — Untitled (Number 2)
Barnett Newman

Untitled (Number 2)

1950

Painted in 1950, this vertical oil on canvas distills Barnett Newman's singular vision to its most concentrated form. Measuring a towering yet slender 121.9 centimeters in height against a narrow width of just 13 centimeters, the work commands attention through extreme proportion rather than expansive scale. A deep, densely worked field of color is bisected or anchored by Newman's signature "zip," the vertical band that became the defining formal device of his practice and one of the most consequential gestures in postwar American painting. Here, that element does not merely divide the surface but charges it, creating a trembling boundary between two states of chromatic presence. Newman conceived of his zips not as compositional elements in any traditional sense but as expressions of place, threshold, and what he described as the sublime in immediate, non-referential terms. This work from 1950 arrives at a pivotal moment in his development, shortly after the breakthrough canvases that established his reputation among the Abstract Expressionist circle and his own theoretical writings that positioned painting as a metaphysical act. The elongated format amplifies the confrontational quality that collectors and institutions have long associated with his work, forcing a bodily reckoning with the picture plane that wider formats do not reproduce. Signed by the artist and offered through the holdings of The Menil Collection in Houston, this canvas carries significant institutional provenance that speaks to its historical standing. The Menil has long been recognized as one of the most discerning private collections assembled in the twentieth century, and works that have passed through its stewardship carry an implied authority. For collectors focused on the foundational figures of postwar abstraction, a signed Newman from 1950 on canvas represents a rare opportunity to acquire a work that sits at the precise origin point of one of painting's most enduring formal legacies.

Medium
Oil on canvas
Overall
Signed
Yes
Location
The Menil Collection, Houston, TX

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About this work

Barnett Newman, Untitled (Number 2), 1950

Painted in 1950, this vertical oil on canvas distills Barnett Newman's singular vision to its most concentrated form. Measuring a towering yet slender 121.9 centimeters in height against a narrow width of just 13 centimeters, the work commands attention through extreme proportion rather than expansive scale. A deep, densely worked field of color is bisected or anchored by Newman's signature "zip," the vertical band that became the defining formal device of his practice and one of the most consequential gestures in postwar American painting. Here, that element does not merely divide the surface but charges it, creating a trembling boundary between two states of chromatic presence. Newman conceived of his zips not as compositional elements in any traditional sense but as expressions of place, threshold, and what he described as the sublime in immediate, non-referential terms. This work from 1950 arrives at a pivotal moment in his development, shortly after the breakthrough canvases that established his reputation among the Abstract Expressionist circle and his own theoretical writings that positioned painting as a metaphysical act. The elongated format amplifies the confrontational quality that collectors and institutions have long associated with his work, forcing a bodily reckoning with the picture plane that wider formats do not reproduce. Signed by the artist and offered through the holdings of The Menil Collection in Houston, this canvas carries significant institutional provenance that speaks to its historical standing. The Menil has long been recognized as one of the most discerning private collections assembled in the twentieth century, and works that have passed through its stewardship carry an implied authority. For collectors focused on the foundational figures of postwar abstraction, a signed Newman from 1950 on canvas represents a rare opportunity to acquire a work that sits at the precise origin point of one of painting's most enduring formal legacies.

Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
overall: 121.9 x 13 x 6.4 cm
Year
1950
Signed
Hand-signed by the artist
Seen at
The Menil Collection, Houston, TX

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Collected by

Kylie Cohen, Alex Capecelatro, Marcel Slater