Stanley Whitney
Untitled, 2022
Monotype in crayon on Lanaquarelle paper
48 x 68 in (121.9 x 172.7 cm)
© Stanley Whitney. Courtesy of the artist and Zeit Contemporary Art, New York.
Further images
Stanley Whitney’s Untitled of 2022 is a large-format monotype in crayon on Lanaquarelle paper, measuring 48 x 68 inches. At this scale, the work occupies a rare position within Whitney’s...
Stanley Whitney’s Untitled of 2022 is a large-format monotype in crayon on Lanaquarelle paper, measuring 48 x 68 inches. At this scale, the work occupies a rare position within Whitney’s practice: it has the wall presence of a painting, the immediacy of a drawing, and the singularity of a unique printed object. Rather than functioning as a secondary extension of the artist’s canvases, the monotype opens Whitney’s mature language from within. It reveals the grid before it becomes dense chromatic architecture, allowing structure, rhythm, pressure, and touch to remain fully visible.
The work’s material character is central to its force. Crayon gives the lines a dry, tactile immediacy, while the monotype process introduces a layer of transfer and compression. The image does not simply sit on the surface as a drawing might; it arrives through pressure, carrying the evidence of contact between pigment, plate, and paper. Lanaquarelle, a substantial watercolor paper, receives the image with a soft absorbency that keeps the color alive without hardening it. The result is a surface that feels both direct and mediated, spontaneous and physically registered.
Whitney organizes the composition through a loose structure of horizontal bands, each one interrupted by vertical, diagonal, and bending lines. The grid is present, but it is never rigid. It acts as a living armature, a set of measures through which color can move. Blue and violet lines establish the dominant scaffold, while red, green, yellow, turquoise, orange, pink, and black move through the interior with shifting degrees of density and speed. Some marks press forward as accents; others hover lightly, as if caught in the process of becoming form.
What distinguishes this monotype is its openness. In many of Whitney’s mature paintings, color gathers into stacked blocks, creating a dense architecture of chromatic weight. Here, by contrast, the structure is more exposed. The image is built from line, interval, and breath. The pale ground is not empty space but an active field, allowing each color to register as a separate event while remaining part of the larger composition. The unfilled areas create pause and suspension, giving the work its particular clarity. Whitney does not reduce the painting language here; he discloses its underlying nervous system.
The work also sharpens the connection between Whitney’s art and musical structure. His grids have often been understood through rhythm, improvisation, and call-and-response, but Untitled makes those principles unusually legible. A green stroke answers a red one; a blue vertical interrupts a pink horizontal; a yellow line briefly opens a pocket of light. The composition advances through relation rather than hierarchy. Each mark has autonomy, but none is isolated. The whole sheet behaves like a score in which measure and freedom remain in productive tension.
Within Whitney’s broader oeuvre, this large scale monotype stands as a particularly lucid example of his late work on paper. It is monumental without becoming heavy, improvisational without becoming loose, and materially direct without collapsing into mere sketch. Its importance lies in the way it clarifies the central achievement of Whitney’s mature practice: the transformation of the grid from a structure of order into a field of movement, memory, and chromatic exchange. For a serious collection, the work offers a compelling large-scale statement in which Whitney’s language is not diminished by paper, but intensified by it.
NOTES
This artwork is signed and dated in pencil in the lower right margin.
The work’s material character is central to its force. Crayon gives the lines a dry, tactile immediacy, while the monotype process introduces a layer of transfer and compression. The image does not simply sit on the surface as a drawing might; it arrives through pressure, carrying the evidence of contact between pigment, plate, and paper. Lanaquarelle, a substantial watercolor paper, receives the image with a soft absorbency that keeps the color alive without hardening it. The result is a surface that feels both direct and mediated, spontaneous and physically registered.
Whitney organizes the composition through a loose structure of horizontal bands, each one interrupted by vertical, diagonal, and bending lines. The grid is present, but it is never rigid. It acts as a living armature, a set of measures through which color can move. Blue and violet lines establish the dominant scaffold, while red, green, yellow, turquoise, orange, pink, and black move through the interior with shifting degrees of density and speed. Some marks press forward as accents; others hover lightly, as if caught in the process of becoming form.
What distinguishes this monotype is its openness. In many of Whitney’s mature paintings, color gathers into stacked blocks, creating a dense architecture of chromatic weight. Here, by contrast, the structure is more exposed. The image is built from line, interval, and breath. The pale ground is not empty space but an active field, allowing each color to register as a separate event while remaining part of the larger composition. The unfilled areas create pause and suspension, giving the work its particular clarity. Whitney does not reduce the painting language here; he discloses its underlying nervous system.
The work also sharpens the connection between Whitney’s art and musical structure. His grids have often been understood through rhythm, improvisation, and call-and-response, but Untitled makes those principles unusually legible. A green stroke answers a red one; a blue vertical interrupts a pink horizontal; a yellow line briefly opens a pocket of light. The composition advances through relation rather than hierarchy. Each mark has autonomy, but none is isolated. The whole sheet behaves like a score in which measure and freedom remain in productive tension.
Within Whitney’s broader oeuvre, this large scale monotype stands as a particularly lucid example of his late work on paper. It is monumental without becoming heavy, improvisational without becoming loose, and materially direct without collapsing into mere sketch. Its importance lies in the way it clarifies the central achievement of Whitney’s mature practice: the transformation of the grid from a structure of order into a field of movement, memory, and chromatic exchange. For a serious collection, the work offers a compelling large-scale statement in which Whitney’s language is not diminished by paper, but intensified by it.
NOTES
This artwork is signed and dated in pencil in the lower right margin.
Provenance
Two Palms, New YorkPrivate collection, United States
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