Sol LeWitt regarded prints as an important, almost autonomous field of work and made use of the special possibilities it offered to the full and with aplomb. After all, he cared quite deeply about accessibility and dissemination. With these aims in mind, he also conceived the 'artist's book' and realized this aspect in a radical way.
In the case of graphic arts, the partnership-based collaboration with individual printers and their workshops played a central, inspiring role. For many years, this role was almost exclusively performed by Joe Watanabe. From other groups of works, we know that assistants had special importance in the work of Sol LeWitt and that this involved a redefined image of the artist and a precisely formulated artistic strategy. The Wall Drawings, Sol LeWitt's great contribution to contemporary art, would hardly have secured their place in the body of contemporary artistic achievement without the efforts and engagement of close assistants.
The rich graphic oeuvre that began in the early 1970s and brilliantly unfolded over the decades in the form of individual prints and portfolios makes use of the many different graphic techniques. Yet the artist did not simply execute his designs using print techniques in order to permit duplication. Nor was working directly on the printing plate a matter of tremendous importance. Rather, the close relationship with the printers and the ensuing direct dialogue allows the various printing techniques themselves and their very own specific qualities to come to the fore. The deep, velvety surface of the aquatint, for instance, or the brilliant, signal-like colorfulness of the linocut, the natural, visibly grained, almost tactile presence of the woodcut and the rich transparence of the color, generated through a special process that was developed on the basis of the screenprint lend this graphic body of works an exemplary status. In terms of formal aspects, the works are often organized in a typical, almost emblematic way – e.g. 'Lines in Four Directions' – or the artist developed permutative sequences over multiple sheets as in the portfolios, reminiscent of approaches taken in music.
A characteristic of Sol LeWitt's understanding of art is that it is not about demonstrating a concept that eventually amounts to nothing more than self-sufficiency. Rather, these artistic activities offer a generous variety of ordered visual occurrences, with the order increasingly displaced and superseded by the variety. The stringent artistic approach in no way predetermines the result. Instead, it fades ever more into the background, helping to guide, but discrete and almost instinctive.
Over the years, the gallery's publishing division issued a number of the significant pieces from our exhibition. This can only hint at our special connection with Sol LeWitt. The path taken by the gallery would have gone a different course had the encounter with the artist in the early 1970s not taken place. His friendship and steadfast loyalty accompanied and supported us for over thirty years. This exhibition is an initial fond remembrance, an homage to Sol LeWitt.
Gianfranco Verna

Installation view

Installation view room 1

Installation view room 2

Installation view room 2

Installation view room 3

Installation view room 4

Lines in four directions
in color on color
2004
portfolio of 6 two color linocuts,
each 25 x 48 cm
Ed. 75 AP 8/8

Lines in four directions
in color on color
2004
portfolio of 6 two color linocuts,
each 25 x 48 cm
Ed. 75 AP 8/8

Lines in four directions
in color on color
2004
portfolio of 6 two color linocuts,
each 25 x 48 cm
Ed. 75 AP 8/8

Lines in four directions
in color on color
2004
portfolio of 6 two color linocuts,
each 25 x 48 cm
Ed. 75 AP 8/8

Lines in four directions
in color on color
2004
portfolio of 6 two color linocuts,
each 25 x 48 cm
Ed. 75 AP 8/8

Lines in four directions
in color on color
2004
portfolio of 6 two color linocuts,
each 25 x 48 cm
Ed. 75 AP 8/8

Lines in four directions
in color on color
2004
portfolio of 6 two color linocuts,
each 25 x 48 cm
Ed. 75 AP 8/8

Bands of lines in different directions
1996
50.8 x 210.8 cm
two part color aquatint
Ed. 36 AP 5/8

Lines in four directions with alternating color and grey bands
1993
58.4 x 58.4 cm
woodblock
Ed.40 PP 2/2

The location of six
geometric figures
1975
60.5 x 60.5 cm
etching
Ed. 12/25

Bands of lines in four directions
1993
26.7 x 72.4 cm
woodblock
Ed.113/125

Straight, not straight and broken lines in all horizontal combinations
(three kinds of lines and all their combinations)
1973
each 69 x 53.8 cm
etching
portfolio of 7, Ed. 7/25

Straight, not straight and broken lines in all horizontal combinations
(three kinds of lines and all their combinations)
1973
each 69 x 53.8 cm
etching
portfolio of 7, Ed. 7/25

detail of
Straight, not straight and broken lines in all horizontal combinations
(three kinds of lines and all their combinations)
1973

Straight, not straight and broken lines in all horizontal combinations
(three kinds of lines and all their combinations)
1973
each 69 x 53.8 cm
etching
portfolio of 7, Ed. 7/25

detail of
Straight, not straight and broken lines in all horizontal combinations
(three kinds of lines and all their combinations)
1973

Straight, not straight and broken lines in all horizontal combinations
(three kinds of lines and all their combinations)
1973
each 69 x 53.8 cm
etching
portfolio of 7, Ed. 7/25

detail of
Straight, not straight and broken lines in all horizontal combinations
(three kinds of lines and all their combinations)
1973

Straight, not straight and broken lines in all horizontal combinations
(three kinds of lines and all their combinations)
1973
each 69 x 53.8 cm
etching
portfolio of 7, Ed. 7/25

detail of
Straight, not straight and broken lines in all horizontal combinations
(three kinds of lines and all their combinations)
1973

Straight, not straight and broken lines in all horizontal combinations
(three kinds of lines and all their combinations)
1973
each 69 x 53.8 cm
etching
portfolio of 7, Ed. 7/25

detail of
Straight, not straight and broken lines in all horizontal combinations
(three kinds of lines and all their combinations)
1973

Straight, not straight and broken lines in all horizontal combinations
(three kinds of lines and all their combinations)
1973
each 69 x 53.8 cm
etching
portfolio of 7, Ed. 7/25

detail of
Straight, not straight and broken lines in all horizontal combinations
(three kinds of lines and all their combinations)
1973

Straight, not straight and broken lines in all horizontal combinations
(three kinds of lines and all their combinations)
1973
each 69 x 53.8 cm
etching
portfolio of 7, Ed. 7/25

detail of
Straight, not straight and broken lines in all horizontal combinations
(three kinds of lines and all their combinations)
1973

Straight lines in four directions
1971
50.8 x 50.8 cm
silkscreen (light yellow)
Ex. 29/30

Composite Series
1971
50.8 x 50.8 cm
silkscreen (black)
Ex.37/40

Composite Series
1971
50.8 x 50.8 cm
silkscreen (black)
Ex.39/40

Composite Series
1971
50.8 x 50.8 cm
silkscreen (black)
Ex.37/40

Composite Series
1971
50.8 x 50.8 cm
silkscreen (yellow)
Ex.33/35

Complex Forms
1990
43.2 x 150 cm
color silkscreen
portfolio of 5
Ed. 11/15

Black over colors (red, yellow, blue, black irregular squares superimposed)
1994
53.3 x 53.3 cm
aquatint and etching
Ed. 1/50

Tondo Stars
2002
each 68.9 x 68.9 cm
linocut
portfolio of 6
Ex. 43/100

Tondo Stars
2002
each 68.9 x 68.9 cm
linocut
portfolio of 6
Ex. 43/100

Tondo Stars
2002
each 68.9 x 68.9 cm
linocut
portfolio of 6
Ex. 43/100

Tondo Stars
2002
each 68.9 x 68.9 cm
linocut
portfolio of 6
Ex. 43/100

Tondo Stars
2002
each 68.9 x 68.9 cm
linocut
portfolio of 6
Ex. 43/100

Tondo Stars
2002
each 68.9 x 68.9 cm
linocut
portfolio of 6
Ex. 43/100

Tondo Stars
2002
each 68.9 x 68.9 cm
linocut
portfolio of 6
Ex. 43/100
James Bishop
Paintings and Paintings on Paper
April 16 to June 19, 2026
Richard Tuttle
Complete Interviews 1970–2022
Edited and with a Preface Interview by Dieter Schwarz
Glen Rubsamen
The Petrified Forest
Publisher: Glen Rubsamen
INSIGHT – ARTWORKS IN THE SPOTLIGHT #2, Paintings on Paper by James Bishop presents four works on paper by James Bishop. Created between 1956 and around 1993 they provide valid perspectives on an artistic oeuvre defined by an insistence on painting.
Antonio Calderara Riti di passaggio. Dalla figurazione all'arte concreta, Fondazione Marcello Morandini, Varese, through April 26, 2026
Donald Judd, Judd|Marfa, The Watari Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo, through June 7, 2026
Rita McBride, Five Centuries of Works on Paper: The Grunwald Centre at 70, Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, through May 17, 2026
Abstract Constructions, Nassos Daphnis - Rita McBride, Fondation CAB, Saint-Paul-de-Vence, FR, through October 25, 2026
Richard Tuttle | Giulio Paolini | Marisa Merz | Mario Merz
Long Story Short, Museum Brandhorst, Munich, through January 2027
Fred Sandback Cuts into Spaces (group show), Hall Art Foundation, Kunstmuseum Schloss Derneburg, ongoing
Sculpture, Chinati Foundation, Marfa, October 12, 2025 through July 2026
Sol LeWitt (1928–2007)
A Wall Drawing Retrospective
Yale University Art Gallery and Williams College Museum of Art
November 16, 2008 – 2033