Alfred Leslie
The ever-versatile Alfred Leslie has been on the frontlines of many major movements in postwar American art. Early in his career, Leslie ran with the Abstract Expressionists in New York, producing immense, lush abstractions and counting Barnett Newman, Franz Kline, and critic Clement Greenberg among his close associates. From there, Leslie would experiment radically, making silkscreen boxes years before Andy Warhol’s emergence and painting hyper-realistic figurative scenes that would show alongside Chuck Close and Philip Pearlstein. “I don't think he's gotten his due,” Whitney curator Barbara Haskell once said. “I think he did fall between the cracks chronologically…I think it was difficult for people to understand his career as one unit.” Leslie was also at the forefront of experimental film, collaborating with Robert Frank to make Pull My Daisy (1959), a tribute to the Beat generation featuring Richard Bellamy, Allen Ginsberg, Alice Neel, and Larry Rivers.
Permanently (from The New York School)
1960
The complete artists' book including 5 original color silkscreens. Signed in ink on the colophon page by the artist and the poet Kenneth Koch who contributed the poems for this collaborative project.
17.5 x 14 inches (each)
Publisher, Tiber Press, NY
Printer, Tiber Press, NY
Edition of 200
Signed, numbered in ink on the colophon page
$2,500