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Orange Naked Woman from One Cent Life Lithograph | Kiki Kogelnik,{{product.type}}

Orange Naked Woman from One Cent Life

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Kiki Kogelnik

Kiki Kogelnik

$750

Austrian (1935–1997)

  • Date: 1964
  • Lithograph
  • Size: 15 x 23 in. (38.1 x 58.42 cm)
  • Frame Size: 22 x 29 inches
  • Publisher: E.W. Kornfeld

$750

Framed

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about Orange Naked Woman from One Cent Life

In 1962, artist Walasse Ting shared his dream project with painter Sam Francis: to create an anthology of his poetry illustrated by leading artists of their time.

Over the next two years, Ting and Francis recruited Abstract Expressionists and Pop artists—Andy Warhol, Joan Mitchell, Robert Rauschenberg, and Roy Lichtenstein, among them—to create prints for their collaborative publication, which they playfully titled 1¢ Life. Published in 1964 by E. W. Kornfeld in an edition of 2,000 books, 1¢ Life features 62 color lithographs by 28 iconic artists, including colorful lips by Warhol, abstract splatters by Mitchell, and cartoon girls by Lichtenstein. While complete examples of 1¢ Life can be found in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the British Museum, fully-intact versions of the artists’ book rarely arrive on the market today. Instead, individual lithographs from the publication (designed to be loose and removable) offer collectors an accessible way to acquire prints by some of the most iconic talents of the 1960s.

About The Artist: Kiki Kogelnik

Kiki Kogelnik an Austrian by birth and training lived in the United States for many years. She is exhibited widely in Europe and the U.S. Her early work was primarily abstract, but soon evolved into cut out figure forms in space age settings and clothing. These early interests continue to appear in the present figure paintings of women. "Fashion imagery relates directly to our fantasy expectations of the world... expectations which are never met...

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About The Medium: Lithograph

A print created using flat stones or metal plates. The artist creates a lithograph by drawing an image directly onto the printing element using materials like lithograph crayons or special grease pencils. After this, the drawing is transferred from the plate to the paper in multiples. A lithograph will not have dots when examined with a magnifying glass.

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Orange Naked Woman from One Cent Life

Kiki Kogelnik

1964

Framed

Orange Naked Woman from One Cent Life

Kiki Kogelnik

1964

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