Blue Birds April 25, 1968 Lithograph on Paper 33.5"x28.5" framed, 24.75"x19" unframed
Edition 171/300. Plate initialed lower right -- this was the last lithograph that Braque created, he died while it was at the lithography studio, therefore it was not signed after printing. Framed in a restored vintage wide-faced wood frame in a distressed light gray finish using warm white archival matting with spacers behind conservation clear glass. Good vintage condition.
From the estate of Edyth and Phillip Bassett.
Georges Braque was a French painter, collagist, printmaker and sculptor. He is notable for his association with the fauvist movement from 1905, and his major contribution to the development of cubism. Braque worked closely alongside Pablo Picasso between 1908 and 1912, creating the language of cubist painting, which marked a massive historical change in the practice of painting and artmaking that rippled through the rest of the 20th century.
His work is held by some of the world’s leading institutions in fine art such as the Guggenheim Museum (NYC), Metropolitan Museum of Art (NYC), the Museum of Modern Art (NYC), Museum of Fine Arts (Boston, MA), the Norton Simon Museum (Pasadena, CA), Musee d'Orsay (Paris), Louvre Museum (Paris), as well as the Tate Gallery in London. View The Legends of Modern Art Collection & Read the Bassett Family Story