
Early Spring
1966 · Lithograph on paper
image: 217 x 220 mm
Tate

Alfred Manessier was a French painter and printmaker whose abstract compositions emerged from a deeply felt Christian spirituality and meditation on light. Working primarily in oils, gouache, and etching from the 1940s onward, his work evolved from figuration toward non-representational forms organized around rhythmic linear structures and luminous color fields. His practice was inseparable from his faith and his study of medieval stained glass, which shaped his approach to transparency and radiant color. Manessier remained committed to abstraction as a vehicle for spiritual experience throughout his career.
Source: Moma Bulk 2026 05 04 · Trust score: 92% · Updated 25d ago