
HOWARD HODGKIN "TWO TO GO" LITHOGRAPH, 1981-82
Howard Hodgkin (1932–2017) was a renowned British painter and printmaker and a central figure in twentieth-century abstraction. Drawing inspiration from everyday life, he rendered sentimental motifs through a shifting synthesis of abstract and representational styles.
Hodgkin's printmaking methods were ambitious, spontaneous, and experimental. Rather than using the medium merely to replicate his paintings, he treated it as an essential site for experimentation, exploring colour, texture, and form with the same emotional intensity that defined his painted work. From the 1970s onward, his prints combined multiple techniques, including hand-colouring and layered processes, creating compositions that were as expressive and painterly as they were formally inventive.
"Two to Go" (often paired with its companion print "One Down") is one of the few monochrome works in Hodgkin’s print output from this period. The layering of printed marks and hand-applied gouache creates a rich, tapestry-like effect. Full of movement and vigour, the marks highlight a central form, punctuated by opaque black dots and a sheer white overlay.
Through his prints, Hodgkin demonstrates that abstraction can carry the weight of memory, emotion, and lived experience, further solidifying his legacy as an artist who blurred the line between image and feeling.
In 1985, Hodgkin was the winner of the Turner Prize and was subsequently knighted in 1992. Today, his work can be found in many major public collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York), the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Art Gallery of Ontario.
"Two to Go" is in the permanent collection of the MoMa, and the University of Kentucky Art Museum.
Questions about this piece? Contact us, call +1.416.704.1720, or visit our Toronto gallery.
"Two to Go"
1981-82
Numbered "82/100" lower left
Initialed "HH" and dated "81" lower centre
Edition: 100 + 25 APs
36"H 48"W (work)
43.25"H 55.25"W (framed)
Lithograph from three aluminum plates printed in classic black, transparent grey and violet black, with hand colouring in gouache (four different greys), on buff Velin Arches mould-made paper (300 gsm).
Proofed and printed by Judith Solodkin at Solo Press Inc., New York
Hand-coloured by Cinda Sparling, New York.
Published by Bernard Jacobson, Ltd., London, 1982
Very good condition.
Literature: Heenk 66; exh. cat. Tate Gallery, London, 1985, cat. number 43.
Note: The original owner of the print has stated that the frames were painted by Hodgkin (which he was known to do), but confirmation is pending.
Original: $6,000.00
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HOWARD HODGKIN "TWO TO GO" LITHOGRAPH, 1981-82
Howard Hodgkin (1932–2017) was a renowned British painter and printmaker and a central figure in twentieth-century abstraction. Drawing inspiration from everyday life, he rendered sentimental motifs through a shifting synthesis of abstract and representational styles.
Hodgkin's printmaking methods were ambitious, spontaneous, and experimental. Rather than using the medium merely to replicate his paintings, he treated it as an essential site for experimentation, exploring colour, texture, and form with the same emotional intensity that defined his painted work. From the 1970s onward, his prints combined multiple techniques, including hand-colouring and layered processes, creating compositions that were as expressive and painterly as they were formally inventive.
"Two to Go" (often paired with its companion print "One Down") is one of the few monochrome works in Hodgkin’s print output from this period. The layering of printed marks and hand-applied gouache creates a rich, tapestry-like effect. Full of movement and vigour, the marks highlight a central form, punctuated by opaque black dots and a sheer white overlay.
Through his prints, Hodgkin demonstrates that abstraction can carry the weight of memory, emotion, and lived experience, further solidifying his legacy as an artist who blurred the line between image and feeling.
In 1985, Hodgkin was the winner of the Turner Prize and was subsequently knighted in 1992. Today, his work can be found in many major public collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York), the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Art Gallery of Ontario.
"Two to Go" is in the permanent collection of the MoMa, and the University of Kentucky Art Museum.
Questions about this piece? Contact us, call +1.416.704.1720, or visit our Toronto gallery.
"Two to Go"
1981-82
Numbered "82/100" lower left
Initialed "HH" and dated "81" lower centre
Edition: 100 + 25 APs
36"H 48"W (work)
43.25"H 55.25"W (framed)
Lithograph from three aluminum plates printed in classic black, transparent grey and violet black, with hand colouring in gouache (four different greys), on buff Velin Arches mould-made paper (300 gsm).
Proofed and printed by Judith Solodkin at Solo Press Inc., New York
Hand-coloured by Cinda Sparling, New York.
Published by Bernard Jacobson, Ltd., London, 1982
Very good condition.
Literature: Heenk 66; exh. cat. Tate Gallery, London, 1985, cat. number 43.
Note: The original owner of the print has stated that the frames were painted by Hodgkin (which he was known to do), but confirmation is pending.
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Howard Hodgkin (1932–2017) was a renowned British painter and printmaker and a central figure in twentieth-century abstraction. Drawing inspiration from everyday life, he rendered sentimental motifs through a shifting synthesis of abstract and representational styles.
Hodgkin's printmaking methods were ambitious, spontaneous, and experimental. Rather than using the medium merely to replicate his paintings, he treated it as an essential site for experimentation, exploring colour, texture, and form with the same emotional intensity that defined his painted work. From the 1970s onward, his prints combined multiple techniques, including hand-colouring and layered processes, creating compositions that were as expressive and painterly as they were formally inventive.
"Two to Go" (often paired with its companion print "One Down") is one of the few monochrome works in Hodgkin’s print output from this period. The layering of printed marks and hand-applied gouache creates a rich, tapestry-like effect. Full of movement and vigour, the marks highlight a central form, punctuated by opaque black dots and a sheer white overlay.
Through his prints, Hodgkin demonstrates that abstraction can carry the weight of memory, emotion, and lived experience, further solidifying his legacy as an artist who blurred the line between image and feeling.
In 1985, Hodgkin was the winner of the Turner Prize and was subsequently knighted in 1992. Today, his work can be found in many major public collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York), the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Art Gallery of Ontario.
"Two to Go" is in the permanent collection of the MoMa, and the University of Kentucky Art Museum.
Questions about this piece? Contact us, call +1.416.704.1720, or visit our Toronto gallery.
"Two to Go"
1981-82
Numbered "82/100" lower left
Initialed "HH" and dated "81" lower centre
Edition: 100 + 25 APs
36"H 48"W (work)
43.25"H 55.25"W (framed)
Lithograph from three aluminum plates printed in classic black, transparent grey and violet black, with hand colouring in gouache (four different greys), on buff Velin Arches mould-made paper (300 gsm).
Proofed and printed by Judith Solodkin at Solo Press Inc., New York
Hand-coloured by Cinda Sparling, New York.
Published by Bernard Jacobson, Ltd., London, 1982
Very good condition.
Literature: Heenk 66; exh. cat. Tate Gallery, London, 1985, cat. number 43.
Note: The original owner of the print has stated that the frames were painted by Hodgkin (which he was known to do), but confirmation is pending.























