
Frank Stella
Ti Juka #10, 1978
价格面议



作品详情
ACE Gallery, Los Angeles, California
Private Collection, Beverly Hills, California

Ti Juka #10 (1978) is an exceptional large-scale relief painting that marks a pivotal moment in Frank Stella’s evolution from Minimalist restraint to the bold, three-dimensional maximalism that would define his later career. Produced following both the angular aluminum constructions of his Brazilian Village series and the biomorphic exuberance of the Exotic Bird series, the work represents a critically admired step in Stella’s march toward his groundbreaking maximalist relief constructions—a period widely regarded as among the most commercially and institutionally significant of his oeuvre.
The composition commands the wall with dramatic, overlapping planes of painted aluminum in vivid yellow, teal, orange-red, and sky blue, offset by silver and earth-toned elements. The interlocking geometric planes are cantilevered off the wall and angled against one another in dynamic tension, each element simultaneously pressing forward and pulling against its neighbors to create a composition as much architectural as it is painterly. The mixed surface treatment—gestural brushwork applied across hard-edged industrial forms—exemplifies Stella’s fusion of painterly expressiveness and structural rigor.
The stature of this period is affirmed by major museum holdings: Grajau I (1975) resides at The Glass House, Shoubeegi (1978) at SFMOMA, and Harran II (1967) at the Guggenheim. Ti Juka #10 compares favorably to these landmark examples, representing a museum-caliber acquisition from one of the most celebrated and commercially strong chapters of Stella’s practice.

“But, after all, the aim of art is to create space - space that is not compromised by decoration or illustration, space within which the subjects of painting can live.”— Frank Stella
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