Just In: Helen Frankenthaler

Plaza Real
February 17, 2026
Helen Frankenthaler at Zane Bennett Contemporary Art
HELEN FRANKENTHALER | "Plaza Real," 1987. Color etching and aquatint, paper size: 28 3/8 x 35 in (72.1 x 88.9 cm), image size: 20 × 26½ in (50.8 x 67.31 cm)

 

Zane Bennett Contemporary Art is pleased to offer Plaza Real  (1987) by Helen Frankenthaler, one of the most influential figures in postwar American abstraction. Historically recognized for her central role in the development of Color Field painting, Frankenthaler extended the gestural vocabulary of Abstract Expressionism into expansive, immersive fields of color. How she reshaped the trajectory of American painting was not limited to her early soak-stain canvases, as her printmaking practice was an equally ambitious exploration of chromatic space and technical innovation. 

 

In 1987, Frankenthaler traveled to Barcelona to work at Ediciones Polígrafa, S.A., owned then by Joan de Muga. During an intense ten-day residency, she generated the plates that would form several editions, including Plaza Real. As with other workshop projects in her career, the initial burst of production was followed by months of refinement. De Muga made multiple trips to Frankenthaler's New York studio, where they reviewed proofs and adjusted color, plate states, and sequencing before the edition was approved in April 1988. The resulting print reflects this extended collaboration—what Frankenthaler described as a process of "changing and exchanging," developing a vocabulary, and then learning how to "spell the words." 

 

Technically, Plaza Real is a soft-ground etching with aquatint, printed in seven colors from three copper plates. The luminous yellow ground was printed first, establishing a radiant chromatic field that dominates the composition. A second plate carries black, gray, blue, red, and orange passages, while a third plate prints white, activating negative space and clarifying edges. The principal black imagery was created by coating the copper plate with varnish and dissolving it with a turpentine-soaked rag, allowing Frankenthaler to manipulate the exposed copper with painterly immediacy. A dense black band along the lower edge, reinforced through aquatint, anchors the composition and introduces a structural counterpoint to the buoyant yellow expanse. 

 

The title Plaza Real likely references the historic square, also known as Plaça Reial, just off La Rambla in Barcelona. The title underscores how Frankenthaler absorbed the ambience of the environment she was working in. With an economy of shapes and lines, the bold yellow ground animated by three brightly colored dots as well as faint circles and swirls in Plaza Real captures the vibrance and energy of the square. She often noted that the character of each workshop—the light in the press room, the rhythm of the city outside, the personalities of the printers—shaped the work produced.  

 

Frankenthaler's approach to the prints she produced at Polígrafa demonstrates that her commitment to experimentation remained central throughout her career. Rather than treating printmaking as a secondary or reproductive practice, she used intaglio as a site of invention—building plates, revising states, and refining color sequences through sustained proofing. Plaza Real stands as a compelling example of her late-1980s printmaking—technically complex, chromatically assertive, and fully aligned with the innovations that secured her place in the history of postwar abstraction. 

 

Works by Helen Frankenthaler are held in major museum collections including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., and the Tate in London. For information about this impression ofPlaza Realreferenced here, or to inquire about other postwar abstraction prints available through the gallery, please email info@zanebennettgallery.com.

 

View the artwork.

Helen Frankenthaler at Zane Bennett Contemporary Art

HELEN FRANKENTHALER | Plaza Real, 1987. Color etching and aquatint, paper size: 28 3/8 x 35 in (72.1 x 88.9 cm), image size: 20 × 26½ in (50.8 x 67.31 cm)

 

Helen Frankenthaler at Zane Bennett Contemporary Art

HELEN FRANKENTHALER | (DETAIL) Plaza Real, 1987. Color etching and aquatint, paper size: 28 3/8 x 35 in (72.1 x 88.9 cm), image size: 20 × 26½ in (50.8 x 67.31 cm)

 

Helen Frankenthaler at Zane Bennett Contemporary ArtHELEN FRANKENTHALER | (DETAIL) Plaza Real, 1987. Color etching and aquatint, paper size: 28 3/8 x 35 in (72.1 x 88.9 cm), image size: 20 × 26½ in (50.8 x 67.31 cm)

 

Helen Frankenthaler at Zane Bennett Contemporary Art

HELEN FRANKENTHALER | (DETAIL) Plaza Real, 1987. Color etching and aquatint, paper size: 28 3/8 x 35 in (72.1 x 88.9 cm), image size: 20 × 26½ in (50.8 x 67.31 cm)

 

Helen Frankenthaler at Zane Bennett Contemporary Art

HELEN FRANKENTHALER | (DETAIL) Plaza Real, 1987. Color etching and aquatint, paper size: 28 3/8 x 35 in (72.1 x 88.9 cm), image size: 20 × 26½ in (50.8 x 67.31 cm)

 

Photos by Marylene Mey, courtesy of Zane Bennett Contemporary Art

About the author

Hayden Hunt