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Born 1928 ; printmaker, sculptor, painter
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Variant names: Robert Clark
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Associated places: New York , New York and Vinalhaven
, Maine
Born
in 1928 at New Castle, Indiana, as Robert Clark. Between 1945 and
1948 he studied at art schools in Indianapolis and Utica, and from
1949 to 1953 at the Chicago Art Institute School and the Skowhgan
School of Painting and Sculpture, Maine. In 1953 and 1954 he studied
at the Edinburgh College of Art and London University, after which
he settled in New York. He took up contact with the painters Kelly,
Smith and Youngerman. His early works were inspired by traffic signs,
automatic amusement machines, commercial stencils and old tradenames.
In the early sixties he did sculpture assemblages and developed
his style of vivid color surfaces, involving letters, words and
numbers. In 1966 he had exhibitions in Düsseldorf, Eindhoven (Van
Abbemuseum), Krefeld (Museum Haus Lange) and Stuttgart (Württembergische
Kunstverein). He was represented at the documenta "4" exhibition,
Kassel, in 1968. He became known for silkscreen prints, posters
and sculptures which took the word LOVE as their theme. The brash
directness of these works stemmed from their symmetrical arrangements
of color and form.
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