- Victor Pasmore
- Points of Contact No. 21, 1974
- etching and aquatint
- 22 x 15.5 in (55.88 x 39.37 cm)
- Paper size: 32.25 x 23.5 in (81.92 x 59.69 cm)
- Framed: 37 x 26 in (93.98 x 66.04 cm)
- Signature: Signed and dated 1974 lower right, numbered 70/70 lower left, titled verso
Bowness & Lambertini 36
Printed by Kelpra Studio, London. Published by Marlborough Graphics, London.
Though he began his career making still lifes and landscapes, painter and printmaker Victor Passmore became a pioneer of early British abstraction who went on to represent the country at the Venice Biennale in 1960 and the Bienal de São Paulo in 1965. Pasmore first tried his hand at abstract painting in the 1930s —but it wasn’t until 1947 that his work fully shifted toward nonrepresentational imagery. In his earlier abstractions, he employed collaged elements and linear forms; by 1952 his paintings and prints had become geometric, constructivist compositions. Pasmore’s art continued to develop throughout his career, evolving to include soft-edged shapes and meandering lines as well as the blue and green hues and organic forms that characterize his later prints.