Untitled 1968 by Adolph Gottlieb

Untitled by Adolph Gottlieb (1968) — Framed Art Print | Zephyeer
🚚 Free Worldwide Shipping on Every Order — No Minimum Required
Abstract Expressionism · 1968
Untitled - 1968 by Adolph Gottlieb — Framed art print at Zephyeer
Free Shipping · All Sizes · All Countries
HomeAbstract ExpressionismAdolph GottliebUntitled (1968)
Adolph Gottlieb

Untitled (1968)

1968 · Oil on canvas · Gallery framed print
30×40 cm (12×16")
$24999
FREE shipping worldwide · In stock
Add to Cart
Free Worldwide Shipping
30-Day Returns
Archival Pigment Inks
Handcrafted Framing

The Bursting Energy of Gottlieb’s Late Abstraction

This untitled 1968 work marks a pivotal moment in Adolph Gottlieb’s late career, where his signature Burst imagery reached its most distilled form. The painting’s explosive contrast—dark, organic lower shapes against a radiant upper field—embodies the tension between earthly weight and celestial light that defined his final decade. Unlike earlier works where the “burst” elements felt more contained, here the upper zone’s luminous strokes appear to detonate outward, dissolving the boundary between figure and ground.

Created during a period when Gottlieb was refining his visual language after decades of experimentation, this composition reflects his deep engagement with Jungian psychology and mythic archetypes. The Museum of Modern Art notes how his late works abandoned literal representation entirely, instead using abstract forms to evoke primal dualities: chaos and order, darkness and illumination. The 1968 dating places it among his most mature statements, where technical mastery and conceptual depth converge without compromise.

Untitled - 1968 by Adolph Gottlieb — Framed art print at Zephyeer
Adolph Gottlieb, Untitled (1968). Oil on canvas. 30×40 cm framed print.
The Artist’s Vision

Gottlieb and the Second Generation of Abstract Expressionism

While often overshadowed by Pollock’s drips or Rothko’s color fields, Adolph Gottlieb played a crucial role in shaping Abstract Expressionism’s second wave. As a founding member of The Ten in 1935, he rejected regionalist trends decades before the movement’s 1950s heyday, advocating for pure abstraction as a means to universal human experience. His 1968 works like this untitled piece demonstrate how he distilled complex philosophical ideas into visceral, immediate visual impact.

By the late 1960s, Gottlieb had abandoned the pictographic symbols of his earlier Imaginary Landscapes series in favor of these radical dualities. The Tate’s analysis emphasizes how his late-career bursts function as “visual metaphors for the subconscious,” where the lower dark masses represent repressed energies and the upper luminous zones suggest transcendence. This particular 1968 composition’s asymmetry—with the burst offset to the right—creates a dynamic tension absent in his more symmetrical earlier works.

The genius of Gottlieb’s 1968 abstractions lies in their ability to feel simultaneously ancient and futuristic—like cave paintings rendered with the precision of space-age technology.
Technical Mastery

The Making of an Abstract Icon

Compositional Dynamics

The painting’s power emerges from its rigorous division into two horizontal zones, each occupying precisely half the canvas. The lower register’s matte black forms—with their irregular, almost geological edges—create a gravitational pull that anchors the composition. Above them, the upper zone’s thin, jagged strokes of white and pale yellow appear to float, their irregular rhythms suggesting both celestial phenomena and microscopic cellular structures.

Chromatic Strategy

Gottlieb’s palette here is deceptively simple: the deep blacks of the lower forms contain subtle variations of warm and cool undertones, while the upper zone’s off-whites and pale ochres create an optical vibration against the raw canvas ground. This limited chromatic range forces viewers to focus on the relationships between forms rather than their individual characteristics—a hallmark of his mature style that distinguishes it from the more colorful abstractions of his contemporaries.

Own This Explosive Abstract Expressionist Statement

Bring home Gottlieb’s radical 1968 composition in a gallery-quality frame, ready to hang. Each print ships free worldwide with archival materials ensuring decades of vibrant color.

Add to Cart — Free Worldwide Shipping
Design Application

Where This Print Commands Attention

The 30×40 cm dimensions make this framed print ideally suited for statement walls in modern interiors. Its high-contrast palette demands placement against deep tones—charcoal gray, navy, or forest green walls amplify its visual impact, while the raw canvas-like background prevents it from overwhelming lighter spaces. In contemporary lofts, position it above low-slung furniture to emphasize the vertical tension between the composition’s halves; in traditional settings, the framing’s clean lines will bridge classic architecture and avant-garde content.

For optimal viewing, hang the print at eye level in spaces with controlled lighting to preserve the delicate balance between the matte lower forms and the luminous upper strokes. The work’s scale and intensity make it equally effective as a solo focal point in minimalist interiors or as the anchor for a gallery wall of smaller abstract works.

Essential Information
What framing and materials are included?

Each print arrives in a custom-built frame using solid wood moulding with a matte finish that complements the artwork’s palette. We use archival pigment inks on heavyweight cotton rag paper, with UV-protective glazing to prevent fading.

Where do you ship, and how long does delivery take?

We offer free express shipping to all countries, with no minimum purchase required. Production takes 2–3 business days, followed by 5–7 business days for worldwide delivery. All duties and taxes are prepaid for international orders.

How do you ensure the print won’t fade over time?

Our giclée printing process uses pigment-based inks rated for 100+ years of color stability under museum conditions. The UV-filtering glazing blocks 97% of harmful light, while the cotton rag paper is lignin-free and pH-neutral to prevent yellowing.

What’s your return policy?

You may return your framed print within 30 days of delivery for a full refund, no questions asked. We provide return shipping labels for all international locations at no cost. Prints must be in original condition with all packaging intact.

Sources & Further Reading

  1. The Museum of Modern Art. "Adolph Gottlieb: A Retrospective." moma.org
  2. Tate. "Adolph Gottlieb 1903–1974." tate.org.uk
  3. The Art Story. "Adolph Gottlieb: American Painter." theartstory.org
Discover More

More Works by Adolph Gottlieb

Explore Gottlieb’s evolution through these key framed prints from different phases of his groundbreaking career.

Dawn - 1965 by Adolph Gottlieb — Framed art print at Zephyeer
Adolph Gottlieb

Dawn (1965)

View print
Flurry - 1967 by Adolph Gottlieb — Framed art print at Zephyeer
Adolph Gottlieb

Flurry (1967)

View print
Open And Closed - 1970 by Adolph Gottlieb — Framed art print at Zephyeer
Adolph Gottlieb

Open And Closed (1970)

View print
Two Bars - 1964 by Adolph Gottlieb — Framed art print at Zephyeer
Adolph Gottlieb

Two Bars (1964)

View print

You May Also Love

Jeweled Cliffs by Eyvind Earle — Framed art print at Zephyeer
Modernism
Eyvind Earle

Jeweled Cliffs

View print
Desert - 1940 by Richard Pousette Dart — Framed art print at Zephyeer
Abstract Expressionism
Richard Pousette Dart

Desert (1940)

View print
Dutch Landscape With Windmills by Pablo Picasso — Framed art print at Zephyeer
Cubism
Pablo Picasso

Dutch Landscape With Windmills

View print

Ready to Bring Gottlieb’s Vision Home?

This 1968 untitled masterwork arrives framed and ready to hang, with free global shipping and a 30-day return window. The 30×40 cm size makes it versatile for both intimate and expansive spaces.

Add to Cart — Free Worldwide Shipping