Paul Jenkins

American, b. 1923
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The paintings of Paul Jenkins have come to represent the spirit, vitality, and invention of post World War II American abstraction. Employing an unorthodox approach to paint application, Jenkins’ fame is as much identified with the process of controlled paint-pouring and canvas manipulation as with the gem-like veils of transparent and translucent color which have characterized his work since the late 1950s. Born in Kansas City, Missouri in 1923, Jenkins was raised near Youngstown, Ohio. Drawn to New York, he became a student of Yasuo Kuniyoshi at the Art Students League and ultimately became associated with the Abstract Expressionists, inspired in part by the “cataclysmic challenge of Pollock and the total metaphysical consumption of Mark Tobey.” An ongoing interest in Eastern religions and philosophy, the study of the I Ching, along with the writings of Carl Jung prompted Jenkins’ turn toward inward reflection and mysticism which have dominated his aesthetic as well as his life.

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Composition for Mourlot

1964

Lithograph printed in colors

10 x 7.5 inches

Printed inscription on verso

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Untitled

Watercolor

43 x 21 inches

Signed in pen

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Phenomena Listen Listen Evermore

2004

Acrylic on canvas

39.5 x 32 inches

Signed

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Untitled

1972

Color lithograph

23 x 18 inches

Edition Unique proof

Signed and dated in pencil

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Composition V

Lithograph

15 x 10 inches

Edition Edition of 40

Signed and numbered in pencil

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Phenomena Franklin’s Kite

1974

Lithograph

26 x 19.5 inches

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Untitled

1970

Lithograph

24 x 15 inches

Edition Proof

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