461 Valencia Street
San Francisco, California 94103

October 24 through November 29, 2009 at ArtZone 461 Gallery

In the early 1960s William Wolff found his artistic direction, creating woodcut prints, that he continued making the rest of his life. Wolff had his first solo show of paintings in 1955 in San Francisco at the Lucien Labaudt Gallery that introduced many artists of the Bay Area Figurative movement. Previously at the Campbell Gallery and ArtZone 461, Wolff’s paintings from the 1950s and 1960s have been shown. ArtZone is pleased to present its first exhibition of William Wolff prints (mainly woodcuts), several of which are in the permanent collections of many prominent museums throughout the United States.

Wolff spent his whole life making art. Initially he studied at the California School of Fine Arts (later San Francisco Art Institute) in the early 1940s. After serving in the Army in World War II he returned to his fine art studies. He received a BFA and then an MFA in 1951 from the University of California-Berkeley. In the summer of 1950, at Mills College, he studied with German painter Max Beckman whose powerful personality left an indelible stamp on Wolff.

Using the modernist flattening and compression developed in his earlier paintings, Wolff’s prints explore philosophical, religious, political and literary themes derived from his extensive reading in several languages. Wolff approached printmaking like painting, by re-working blocks he produced more unique works than multiples, and is why he signed most of them “Artist Proof”.

Opening Reception Saturday October 24, 5:00 – 8:00 pm

Gallery Hours: 12-6 pm Wednesday-Sunday, anytime by appointment

Added by ArtZone 461 Gallery on October 14, 2009