James Howell
James Howell
Alistair Rider
James Howell (1935−2014) was an American abstract artist of unparalleled subtlety. He used infinite variations of the colour grey to explore the fundamentals of light, space, time and kineasthetic perception, exploiting the colour’s mystery, softness and simplicity. In this comprehensive first monograph, Alistair Rider traces Howell’s artistic evolution, from the beginnings of his career in the early 1970s, through to his greatest achievement – the group of abstractions called Series 10, which occupied the last two decades of his life. Rider also chronicles Howell’s biography, including his early studies and accomplishments in architecture, and offers several interpretative frameworks for his oeuvre, notably a connection to East Asian philosophies.
‘The distance between nothing and more than is necessary is a little bit.’
– James Howell
Alistair Rider is Senior Lecturer inThe School of Art History at the University of St Andrews. He writes about European and North American art from the 1950s to the present day, and has a special interest in abstraction, particularly Minimalist art. He is the author of Carl Andre: Things in their Elements (2011).
Circa Press, 2021
Text in English
Hardcover
30 x 26 x 4 cm
268 pages
ISBN: 9781911422211