Details
Artist
Styles
Charcoal on paper; Signed and Dated. Postponderance (1960) by Larry Rivers is a charcoal drawing on paper measuring 17 x 14 inches. The composition features a loosely rendered seated figure, created with energetic, gestural lines and areas of soft shading. The subject’s posture—resting head on hand—suggests introspection or emotional weight, reinforced by the sparse yet expressive use of line. Rivers captures a psychological presence through minimal means, blending abstraction and figuration in a way characteristic of his early 1960s work. Signed and dated, this drawing highlights Rivers' deft command of gesture and his interest in the human form as both subject and expressive vehicle.
Postponderance, 1960
form
Medium
Size
43.2 x 35.6 cm
- Inches
- Centimeters
Edition
Price
Details
Artist
Styles
Charcoal on paper; Signed and Dated. Postponderance (1960) by Larry Rivers is a charcoal drawing on paper measuring 17 x 14 inches. The composition features a loosely rendered seated figure, created with energetic, gestural lines and areas of soft shading. The subject’s posture—resting head on hand—suggests introspection or emotional weight, reinforced by the sparse yet expressive use of line. Rivers captures a psychological presence through minimal means, blending abstraction and figuration in a way characteristic of his early 1960s work. Signed and dated, this drawing highlights Rivers' deft command of gesture and his interest in the human form as both subject and expressive vehicle.
- Recently Added
- Price (low-high )
- Price (high-low )
- Year (low-high )
- Year (high-low )
Larry Rivers
Madame Butterfly, From Metropolitan Opera Fine Art I, 1978
Limited Edition Print
Mixed Media
USD 1,150
What is Gestural?
Gestural art is a term that describes painting with freely sweeping brushstrokes. The primary goal of gestural art is to allow the artist to physically express emotional impulses. The varied, yet expressive paint marks are intended to convey the artist's inner thoughts and emotions, which viewers are believed to understand through the dynamic and spontaneous application of paint.
