Richard Smith
About
Richard Smith (1931-2016) is one of the most influential artists of his generation. After studying in the 1950s at the Royal College of Art, Smith stood apart from the Pop Art movement of the 1960s by combining imagery found in the commercial landscape with an expansive abstract painting language very much his own. He gained critical acclaim for extending the boundaries of painting into three dimensions, creating sculptural shaped canvases with monumental presence, and kite paintings which questioned painting’s edge and the relationship between canvas and support. Of these works, Barbara Rose said, “inevitably they echo the verticality of man’s own gravity-determined stance… These consistent allusions to the human condition prove that abstract art is not necessarily divorced from man’s experience.”
Born in Hertfordshire in 1931, Richard Smith was awarded the Harkness Fellowship in 1959 which facilitated his move to New York, where he had his first solo show at Green Gallery. Smith had a 1966 retrospective at the Whitechapel Gallery and participated in some of the most important exhibitions of his time, such as Place at ICA, London in 1959 alongside Robyn Denny; Situation at RBA Galleries in 1960; and ‘Painting and Sculpture of a Decade’ at Tate in 1964. After being awarded the Grand Prize at the 9th São Paulo Biennial in 1967 and participating in Documenta IV, Kassel in 1968, Smith represented Britain at the 1970 Venice Biennale and was awarded the CBE in 1971. ‘Seven Exhibitions 1961-75’, a major retrospective, was held at Tate in 1975.
Richard Smith's work is extensively held in public collections including the Arts Council England; The British Museum, London; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Tate, London; Victoria and Albert Museum, London; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; MIT, Boston; and Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Vardaxoglou works with the Richard Smith Estate on particular exhibitions and projects. In March 2023 Vardaxoglou presented an exhibition of Richard Smith’s kite paintings; the first exhibition of its kind to show the different iterations of kite painting from the early 1970s to early 1990s.
Selected Works
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Richard Smith
Nassau, 1962
oil on canvas
172.7 x 259.1 cm
68 x 102 ins -
Installation view, Richard Smith, Green Gallery, New York, 1963
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Richard Smith
Gift Wrap, 1963
Currently on view at Tate Britain, London -
Richard Smith, Kasmin Gallery, 1963
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Richard Smith
Ring-A-Lingling, 1966
acrylic on shaped canvas with sheet aluminum, in three parts
213.4 x 640.2 x 43 cm
7ft x 20ft 11 ¾ ins x 17 ins -
Richard Smith
Fieldcrest, 1969
acrylic and polyurethane on canvas
190 x 244 cm
74 3/4 x 96 1/8 in -
Richard Smith
Mandarin, 1970
acrylic and polyurethane on canvas
169 x 303 cm
67 x 120 ins -
Richard Smith
Untitled, 1970
pastel, pencil and crayon on paper
59.5 x 77.5 cm
23 7/16 x 30 1/16 ins -
Richard Smith
Roberta, 1972
acrylic on shaped canvas with canvas straps
218.5 x 200 cm
86 × 78 3/4 ins -
Richard Smith
Banana, 1973
acrylic on canvas with aluminium rods, rope and string
274.3 x 45.7 cm
108 x 18 ins -
Richard Smith, Modern Art Oxford, UK, 1975
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Richard Smith
Shuttle, 1975
acrylic on canvas on 7 panels
each 190 x 190 cm
each 74.8 x 74.8 ins -
Richard Smith, England, c.1975
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Richard Smith
Big T, 1975
Tate Collection -
Richard Smith
Salon for HH, 1980
acrylic on canvas
167.6 x 152.4 cm
66 x 60 ins -
Installation view, Richard Smith, March – April 2023, Vardaxoglou Gallery, London
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Installation view, Richard Smith, March – April 2023, Vardaxoglou Gallery, London
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Richard Smith
Untitled, 1982
acrylic on paper on two sheets
125 x 155 cm
49 x 61 ins -
Richard Smith
Studio Visit, 1981–1982
acrylic on canvas
153 x 323 cm
60 1/4 x 127 1/9 ins -
Richard Smith
Gong, 1987
acrylic on canvas with aluminium
162.6 x 147.3 cm
64 x 58 ins -
Richard Smith
Flags, 1993
acrylic on paper
96.5 x 127 cm
38 x 50 ins -
Richard Smith
Turumagi, 1992
acrylic on canvas and wood
121.9 x 101.6 x 25.4 cm
48 x 40 x 10 ins
Vardaxoglou Exhibitions
Selected Institutional Exhibitions
Resources