American artist Alex Katz is known for his bright, large-scale portraits, combining intimacy with the more detached Pop Art aesthetic. If you’re looking for original Alex Katz prints and editions for sale or would like to sell, request a complimentary valuation and browse our network’s most in-demand works.
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American artist Alex Katz is renowned for his large-scale portraits and figurative works, which combine the vivid, bright visuals of the developing Pop Art movement, with a real sense of intimacy. His work's bold colours, two-dimensional compositions, and scarce detail make them a precursor to Pop Art. And yet, throughout his career, Katz's work has touched a range of mediums and styles, from Impressionist painting to architectural sculpture.
Attending art school in the 1950s, Katz’s unique representational style developed when Abstract Expressionism was at its height. But Katz knew better than to follow the trends of the art world. Taught to paint from life at the Skowhegan for Painting and Sculpture, Katz created a visual language where tradition met innovation, where the stylised language of advertisement and television met portraiture and landscape. His lack of conformity to the trends of the art world and his vast array of works make him one of the most popular artists today.
Since his first solo show in 1954, Katz’s popularity has never faded. It is estimated that Katz participated in more than 500 group shows and had over 200 solo exhibitions. To this day, Katz's artworks feature in the collections of the MoMA in New York, the Art Institute of Chicago, the National Gallery in Washington D.C. and the Tate Gallery in London.
Undoubtedly, his most recognisable and well-loved works are his portraits, particularly of his wife Ada, whom he painted in over 250 works. Katz’s predilection for portraiture betrays his love for the Old Masters and makes him a worthy companion and precursor of the likes of Andy Warhol and Julian Opie. Since the 1960s, Katz began painting on increasingly large surfaces. His most famous portrait of Ada and an iconic Alex Katz work, The Red Smile (1963), dominated by Ada’s profile against a uniform red background, is almost 10 feet wide, making it one of the largest portraits ever painted.
With Katz’s popular and institutional recognition, it is no surprise the artist also achieved considerable commercial success. In 2019, his Blue Umbrella I (1972) made the headlines as it reached over £3 million at auction, making it Katz’s most expensive work sold at auction. The painting, unsurprisingly a representation of Ada, testifies to how the artist has won the public’s affection through his deeply intimate yet revolutionary works.