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Nama, George

GEORGE NAMA Water I, 1973

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Regular price $100
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Limited edition hand-colored linoleum cut by George Nama from the Catalogue of Monuments portfolio, printed at Monument Press on fine Arches Cover stock. This haunting and highly symbolic composition reflects Nama’s fascination with ancient ritual imagery, archaeology, and timeless monumental forms.

The image presents a dark vertical abstract structure emerging from a dense field of black linear texture, crowned by a horn-like organic form and punctuated with small glowing red accents. The composition evokes the presence of an ancient idol, ceremonial artifact, or subterranean monument rising from shadow and silence. Nama’s restrained use of color—soft lavender, muted gold, deep black, and subtle red highlights—creates a meditative and mysterious atmosphere while emphasizing the tactile carved quality of the linoleum cut process.

Only 100 portfolios of Catalogue of Monuments were produced. While the portfolio itself was numbered and signed in the colophon, the individual prints were issued unsigned and unnumbered, exactly as published. This method was typical for important portfolio editions of the period and reflects the collaborative nature of fine art print publishing during the era.

George Nama became known for works that merged modernist abstraction with references to mythology, tribal artifacts, and classical antiquity. His imagery often appears timeless and archeological, suggesting relics from forgotten civilizations while remaining deeply contemporary in form and composition.

A compelling example of the pre-digital printmaking era, where hand-crafted techniques and fine paper production gave works a physical richness and sculptural presence impossible to replicate through modern mass production.

An exceptional piece for collectors of minimalist abstraction, symbolic modernism, and late twentieth-century American printmaking.

Framing available upon request.

Details

Sku: CB0784

Artist: George Nama

Title: Water I

Year: 1973

Signed: No

Medium: Linocut

Edition Size: 100

Framed: No

Frame Suggestion: Inquire with our experts for framing suggestions.

Condition: A: Mint

Dimensions

Paper Size: 9.5 x 6.5 inches ( 24 x 17 cm )

Image Size: 9.5 x 6.5 inches ( 24 x 17 cm )

GEORGE NAMA Water I, 1973

$100

About the Artist

George Nama

George Nama (b. 1939 - ) is an American artist. Nama claims that all his images, whether drawings, etchings or sculptures, are figurative. If they don’t show something that really exists, his configurations “might exist”. Nama’s city of his birth, Homestead, Pennsylvania played a major role in his artistic vocabulary and imagery created in the early 1960’s. Industrial and rugged and largely void of color, Nama recreated familiar city vistas in a rich palette of blacks and grays. Using casein paint, oil sticks, watercolors and inks Nama also masterfully reproduced interiors of his mother’s living room, and his grandmother’s kitchen. Some of the later works, his openly expressionistic sketches of trees, fast and precise, figures and country landscapes point to his transition towards abstraction. Already involved with poets and writers since the early 1960s, Nama collaborated in 1976 with his friend, the French poet and art historian Yves Bonnefoy, on artist’s books. This in turn fostered a series of artist’s books and exhibitions with Alfred Brendel and Charles Simic. During his long career, Nama has been represented in numerous important exhibitions, galleries, and public collections, such as The Morgan Library, the Boston Athenæum, The Metropolitan Museum, the Brooklyn Museum and the Carnegie Institute. He was recently included in the distinguished international art fairs at Maastricht and the Salon du Dessin in Paris.
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