The Collection
Tab Label (see title)
| Artist | Patrick Caulfield (1936-2005) |
| Title | Rosé Bottle |
| Date | 1975 |
| Medium | Screenprint |
| Dimensions | height: 74.00 cm, width: 99.50 cm |
| Inscription | br: Patrick Caulfield 32/70 |
| Published | Waddington Graphics, 1975 |
| Edition number | 32/70 |
| Acquisition | Purchased from Leslie Waddington Prints Ltd, December 1975 |
| Location | UK, London, Government Art Collection |
| GAC number | 12126 |
| The GAC owns other impressions of this work. |
Other works by this artist
| Lamp and Pines | Screenprint 1975 GAC 12121 | |
| Garden with Pines | Screenprint 1975 GAC 12123 | |
| Evening Menu | Screenprint 1975 GAC 12125 | |
| Signature Pots | Screenprint 1975 GAC 12128 | |
| Terracotta Vase | Screenprint 1975 GAC 12130 |
Tab Label (see title)
Tab Label (see title)
This work contains the following subjects; choose a subject below to cross-refer to other works in the collection:
Similar works by subject:
still life
| Flowers on a Window Sill | Oil on board c.1945-1946 GAC 298 | |
| Flowers from the West | Watercolour on paper GAC 354 | |
| Herrings | Oil on panel 1946/1947 GAC 358 | |
| Blue Jar | Oil on canvas GAC 612 | |
| Late Autumn No.4: White Azaleas | Watercolour on paper GAC 750 |
Tab Label (see title)
Tab Label (see title)
Tab Label (see title)
Patrick Caulfield, painter and printmaker, was born in London. He studied at Chelsea School of Art from 1956-60, and at the Royal College of Art from 1960-63. He was associated with Pop art, the style that emerged in the mid 1950s in England and America and had its origins in the mass media and consumerism. In his paintings and prints of domestic objects, Caulfield uses a deliberately anonymous style, with an even, bold black line and flat colour, bring wit and irony to his simplified presentation of the everyday. Caulfield taught at Chelsea School of Art from 1963-71. His work has been exhibited all over the world. Retrospectives have been held at the Tate (1981), the Serpentine (1992-93) and the Hayward (1999) galleries in London.
