• Welcome to Rosenthal Fine Art
    • Carl Andre
    • Richard Anuszkiewicz
    • Txomin Badiola
    • Bleda y Rosa
    • Stanley Boxer
    • John Cage
    • Carlos Carulo
    • Felipe Castaneda
    • Giorgio Cavallon
    • Christo and Jeanne-Claude
    • John Deom
    • Yucel Donmez
    • Helen Frankenthaler
    • Sam Gilliam
    • Judith Goldsmith - Circo Series
    • Judith Goldsmith - Undersea Series
    • Jack Goldstein
    • Dimitri HADZI: Historical Echoes
    • Angel HARO
    • Paul Jenkins
    • Sharon Kopriva
    • Sol LeWitt
    • Roy Lichtenstein
    • Clement Meadmore
    • Robert Motherwell
    • Claes Oldenburg
    • Jerry Ott
    • Santiago Parra
    • Robert Rauschenberg
    • Larry Rivers
    • RU-IN52
    • Hunt Slonem
    • Ellsworth Snyder
    • Harry Sudman
    • Allen Vandever
    • Victor Vasarely
    • Kim Eun Young
  • Publications
  • Appraisals
    • Our Story
    • Contact
    • Our Internship Program
    • Summer Sale Continues
    • Contemporary Masters: March 15-April 30
    • Richard Anuszkiewicz Interconnections-Final Works
    • Past-Stanley Boxer: Painting in the Moment
    • Past Exhibition: Clement Meadmore
    • Past: Then and Now
    • Past: Abstract Expressionism
    • Past: Dick Higgins
    • Past: SOFA Chicago 2018
    • Past: Judith Goldsmith
    • Past-UNDERSEA
    • Past: Nico Munuera: Time. Glance. Color
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Rosenthal Fine Art, Inc.

640 North LaSalle Street, Suite 485
Chicago, IL, 60654
312-475-0700
Rosenthal Fine Art, Inc.

Rosenthal Fine Art, Inc.

Rosenthal Fine Art, Inc.

  • Welcome to Rosenthal Fine Art
  • Artists
    • Carl Andre
    • Richard Anuszkiewicz
    • Txomin Badiola
    • Bleda y Rosa
    • Stanley Boxer
    • John Cage
    • Carlos Carulo
    • Felipe Castaneda
    • Giorgio Cavallon
    • Christo and Jeanne-Claude
    • John Deom
    • Yucel Donmez
    • Helen Frankenthaler
    • Sam Gilliam
    • Judith Goldsmith - Circo Series
    • Judith Goldsmith - Undersea Series
    • Jack Goldstein
    • Dimitri HADZI: Historical Echoes
    • Angel HARO
    • Paul Jenkins
    • Sharon Kopriva
    • Sol LeWitt
    • Roy Lichtenstein
    • Clement Meadmore
    • Robert Motherwell
    • Claes Oldenburg
    • Jerry Ott
    • Santiago Parra
    • Robert Rauschenberg
    • Larry Rivers
    • RU-IN52
    • Hunt Slonem
    • Ellsworth Snyder
    • Harry Sudman
    • Allen Vandever
    • Victor Vasarely
    • Kim Eun Young
  • Publications
  • Appraisals
  • About
    • Our Story
    • Contact
    • Our Internship Program
  • Past exhibitions
    • Summer Sale Continues
    • Contemporary Masters: March 15-April 30
    • Richard Anuszkiewicz Interconnections-Final Works
    • Past-Stanley Boxer: Painting in the Moment
    • Past Exhibition: Clement Meadmore
    • Past: Then and Now
    • Past: Abstract Expressionism
    • Past: Dick Higgins
    • Past: SOFA Chicago 2018
    • Past: Judith Goldsmith
    • Past-UNDERSEA
    • Past: Nico Munuera: Time. Glance. Color
Phenomena Distant Blink, 1987

Paul Jenkins

The paintings of Paul Jenkins have come to represent the spirit, vitality, and invention of post World War II American abstraction. Employing an unorthodox approach to paint application, Jenkins is as much identified with the process of controlled paint-pouring and canvas manipulation as with the gem-like veils of transparent and translucent color which have characterized his work since the late 1950s. Born and raised in Kansas City, Missouri in 1923, Jenkins later moved to Youngstown, Ohio. Drawn to New York, he became a student of Yasuo Kuniyoshi at the Art Students League and ultimately became associated with the Abstract Expressionists, inspired in part by the "cataclysmic challenge of Pollock and the total metaphysical consumption of Mark Tobey." An ongoing interest in Eastern religions and philosophy, the study of the I Ching, along with the writings of Carl Gustav Jung prompted Jenkins' turn toward inward reflection and mysticism which have dominated his aesthetic as well as his life.


Dr. Louis A. Zona, Director
The Butler Institute of American Art

 

Paul Jenkins

The paintings of Paul Jenkins have come to represent the spirit, vitality, and invention of post World War II American abstraction. Employing an unorthodox approach to paint application, Jenkins is as much identified with the process of controlled paint-pouring and canvas manipulation as with the gem-like veils of transparent and translucent color which have characterized his work since the late 1950s. Born and raised in Kansas City, Missouri in 1923, Jenkins later moved to Youngstown, Ohio. Drawn to New York, he became a student of Yasuo Kuniyoshi at the Art Students League and ultimately became associated with the Abstract Expressionists, inspired in part by the "cataclysmic challenge of Pollock and the total metaphysical consumption of Mark Tobey." An ongoing interest in Eastern religions and philosophy, the study of the I Ching, along with the writings of Carl Gustav Jung prompted Jenkins' turn toward inward reflection and mysticism which have dominated his aesthetic as well as his life.


Dr. Louis A. Zona, Director
The Butler Institute of American Art

 

Phenomena Seeing all at Once, 1987

Phenomena Seeing all at Once, 1987

Watercolor, 22 ½  x 15 inches

Private Collection

SOLD

Phenomena Royal Gesture, 1988

Phenomena Royal Gesture, 1988

Watercolor,  31 x 43 ¼ inches

Private Collection

SOLD