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Abstract expressionism

Abstract expressionism is a post–World War II art movement in American painting, developed in New York City in the 1940s.[1] It was the first specifically American movement to achieve international influence and put New York at the center of the Western art world, a role formerly filled by Paris.

Abstract expressionism
Years activeLate 1940s–present
CountryUnited States, specifically New York City
Major figuresClyfford Still, Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, Arshile Gorky, Mark Rothko, Lee Krasner, Robert Motherwell, Franz Kline, Adolph Gottlieb, David Smith, Hans Hofmann, Joan Mitchell
InfluencesModernism, Expressionism (Wassily Kandinsky), Surrealism, Cubism, Dada

Although the term "abstract expressionism" was first applied to American art in 1946 by the art critic Robert Coates, it had been first used in Germany in 1919 in the magazine Der Sturm, regarding German Expressionism. In the United States, Alfred Barr was the first to use this term in 1929 in relation to works by Wassily Kandinsky.[2]

Style

 
David Smith, Cubi VI (1963), Israel Museum, Jerusalem. David Smith was one of the most influential American sculptors of the 20th century.

Technically, an important predecessor is surrealism, with its emphasis on spontaneous, automatic, or subconscious creation. Jackson Pollock's dripping paint onto a canvas laid on the floor is a technique that has its roots in the work of André Masson, Max Ernst, and David Alfaro Siqueiros. The newer research tends to put the exile-surrealist Wolfgang Paalen in the position of the artist and theoretician who fostered the theory of the viewer-dependent possibility space through his paintings and his magazine DYN. Paalen considered ideas of quantum mechanics, as well as idiosyncratic interpretations of the totemic vision and the spatial structure of native-Indian painting from British Columbia and prepared the ground for the new spatial vision of the young American abstracts. His long essay Totem Art (1943) had considerable influence on such artists as Martha Graham, Isamu Noguchi, Pollock, Mark Rothko and Barnett Newman.[3] Around 1944 Barnett Newman tried to explain America's newest art movement and included a list of "the men in the new movement." Paalen is mentioned twice; other artists mentioned are Gottlieb, Rothko, Pollock, Hofmann, Baziotes, Gorky and others. Robert Motherwell is mentioned with a question mark.[4] Another important early manifestation of what came to be abstract expressionism is the work of American Northwest artist Mark Tobey, especially his "white writing" canvases, which, though generally not large in scale, anticipate the "all-over" look of Pollock's drip paintings.

The movement's name is derived from the combination of the emotional intensity and self-denial of the German Expressionists with the anti-figurative aesthetic of the European abstract schools such as Futurism, the Bauhaus, and Synthetic Cubism. Additionally, it has an image of being rebellious, anarchic, highly idiosyncratic and, some feel, nihilistic.[5] In practice, the term is applied to any number of artists working (mostly) in New York who had quite different styles, and even to work that is neither especially abstract nor expressionist. California abstract expressionist Jay Meuser, who typically painted in the non-objective style, wrote about his painting Mare Nostrum, "It is far better to capture the glorious spirit of the sea than to paint all of its tiny ripples." Pollock's energetic "action paintings", with their "busy" feel, are different, both technically and aesthetically, from the violent and grotesque Women series of Willem de Kooning's figurative paintings and the rectangles of color in Rothko's Color Field paintings (which are not what would usually be called expressionist, and which Rothko denied were abstract). Yet all four artists are classified as abstract expressionists.

Abstract expressionism has many stylistic similarities to the Russian artists of the early 20th century such as Wassily Kandinsky. Although it is true that spontaneity or the impression of spontaneity characterized many of the abstract expressionists' works, most of these paintings involved careful planning, especially since their large size demanded it. With artists such as Paul Klee, Kandinsky, Emma Kunz, and later on Rothko, Newman, and Agnes Martin, abstract art clearly implied expression of ideas concerning the spiritual, the unconscious, and the mind.[6]

Why this style gained mainstream acceptance in the 1950s is a matter of debate. American social realism had been the mainstream in the 1930s. It had been influenced not only by the Great Depression, but also by the Mexican muralists such as David Alfaro Siqueiros and Diego Rivera. The political climate after World War II did not long tolerate the social protests of these painters. Abstract expressionism arose during the war and began to be showcased during the early forties at galleries in New York such as The Art of This Century Gallery. The post-war McCarthy era was a time of artistic censorship in the United States, but if the subject matter were totally abstract then it would be seen as apolitical, and therefore safe. Or if the art was political, the message was largely for the insiders.[7]

While the movement is closely associated with painting, collagist Anne Ryan and certain sculptors in particular were also integral to abstract expressionism.[8] David Smith, and his wife Dorothy Dehner, Herbert Ferber, Isamu Noguchi, Ibram Lassaw, Theodore Roszak, Phillip Pavia, Mary Callery, Richard Stankiewicz, Louise Bourgeois, and Louise Nevelson in particular were some of the sculptors considered as being important members of the movement. In addition, the artists David Hare, John Chamberlain, James Rosati, Mark di Suvero, and sculptors Richard Lippold, Raoul Hague, George Rickey, Reuben Nakian, and even Tony Smith, Seymour Lipton, Joseph Cornell, and several others[9] were integral parts of the abstract expressionist movement. Many of the sculptors listed participated in the Ninth Street Show,[9] a famous exhibition curated by Leo Castelli on East Ninth Street in New York City in 1951. Besides the painters and sculptors of the period the New York School of abstract expressionism also generated a number of supportive poets, including Frank O'Hara and photographers such as Aaron Siskind and Fred McDarrah, (whose book The Artist's World in Pictures documented the New York School during the 1950s), and filmmakers—notably Robert Frank—as well.

Although the abstract expressionist school spread quickly throughout the United States, the epicenters of this style were New York City and the San Francisco Bay area of California.

Art critics of the post–World War II era

At a certain moment the canvas began to appear to one American painter after another as an arena in which to act. What was to go on the canvas was not a picture but an event.

In the 1940s there were not only few galleries (The Art of This Century, Pierre Matisse Gallery, Julien Levy Gallery and a few others) but also few critics who were willing to follow the work of the New York Vanguard. There were also a few artists with a literary background, among them Robert Motherwell and Barnett Newman, who functioned as critics as well.

While the New York avant-garde was still relatively unknown by the late 1940s, most of the artists who have become household names today had their well-established patron critics: Clement Greenberg advocated Jackson Pollock and the color field painters like Clyfford Still, Mark Rothko, Barnett Newman, Adolph Gottlieb and Hans Hofmann; Harold Rosenberg seemed to prefer the action painters such as Willem de Kooning and Franz Kline, as well as the seminal paintings of Arshile Gorky; Thomas B. Hess, the managing editor of ARTnews, championed Willem de Kooning.

The new critics elevated their protégés by casting other artists as "followers"[11] or ignoring those who did not serve their promotional goal.

In 1958, Mark Tobey became the first American painter since Whistler (1895) to win top prize at the Venice Biennale.[12]

 
Barnett Newman, Onement 1, 1948. During the 1940s Barnett Newman wrote several articles about the new American painting.

Barnett Newman, a late member of the Uptown Group, wrote catalogue forewords and reviews, and by the late 1940s became an exhibiting artist at Betty Parsons Gallery. His first solo show was in 1948. Soon after his first exhibition, Barnett Newman remarked in one of the Artists' Sessions at Studio 35: "We are in the process of making the world, to a certain extent, in our own image."[13] Utilizing his writing skills, Newman fought every step of the way to reinforce his newly established image as an artist and to promote his work. An example is his letter on April 9, 1955, "Letter to Sidney Janis: — it is true that Rothko talks the fighter. He fights, however, to submit to the philistine world. My struggle against bourgeois society has involved the total rejection of it."[14]

Strangely, the person thought to have had most to do with the promotion of this style was a New York Trotskyist: Clement Greenberg. As long-time art critic for the Partisan Review and The Nation, he became an early and literate proponent of abstract expressionism. The well-heeled artist Robert Motherwell joined Greenberg in promoting a style that fit the political climate and the intellectual rebelliousness of the era.

Greenberg proclaimed abstract expressionism and Pollock in particular as the epitome of aesthetic value. He supported Pollock's work on formalistic grounds as simply the best painting of its day and the culmination of an art tradition going back via Cubism and Cézanne to Monet, in which painting became ever-'purer' and more concentrated in what was 'essential' to it, the making of marks on a flat surface.[15]

Pollock's work has always polarised critics. Rosenberg spoke of the transformation of painting into an existential drama in Pollock's work, in which "what was to go on the canvas was not a picture but an event". "The big moment came when it was decided to paint 'just to paint'. The gesture on the canvas was a gesture of liberation from value—political, aesthetic, moral."[16]

One of the most vocal critics of abstract expressionism at the time was The New York Times art critic John Canaday. Meyer Schapiro and Leo Steinberg along with Greenberg and Rosenberg were important art historians of the post-war era who voiced support for abstract expressionism. During the early-to-mid-sixties younger art critics Michael Fried, Rosalind Krauss, and Robert Hughes added considerable insights into the critical dialectic that continues to grow around abstract expressionism.

History

World War II and the Post-War period

 
Richard Pousette-Dart, Symphony No. 1, The Transcendental, 1941–42

During the period leading up to and during World War II, modernist artists, writers, and poets, as well as important collectors and dealers, fled Europe and the onslaught of the Nazis for safe haven in the United States. Many of those who didn't flee perished. Among the artists and collectors who arrived in New York during the war (some with help from Varian Fry) were Hans Namuth, Yves Tanguy, Kay Sage, Max Ernst, Jimmy Ernst, Peggy Guggenheim, Leo Castelli, Marcel Duchamp, André Masson, Roberto Matta, André Breton, Marc Chagall, Jacques Lipchitz, Fernand Léger, and Piet Mondrian. A few artists, notably Picasso, Matisse, and Pierre Bonnard remained in France and survived.

The post-war period left the capitals of Europe in upheaval, with an urgency to economically and physically rebuild and to politically regroup. In Paris, formerly the center of European culture and capital of the art world, the climate for art was a disaster, and New York replaced Paris as the new center of the art world. Post-war Europe saw the continuation of Surrealism, Cubism, Dada, and the works of Matisse. Also in Europe, Art brut,[17] and Lyrical Abstraction or Tachisme (the European equivalent to abstract expressionism) took hold of the newest generation. Serge Poliakoff, Nicolas de Staël, Georges Mathieu, Vieira da Silva, Jean Dubuffet, Yves Klein, Pierre Soulages and Jean Messagier, among others are considered important figures in post-war European painting.[18] In the United States, a new generation of American artists began to emerge and to dominate the world stage, and they were called Abstract Expressionists.

Gorky, Hofmann, and Graham

 
Arshile Gorky, The Liver is the Cock's Comb (1944), oil on canvas, 7314 × 98" (186 × 249 cm) Albright–Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, New York. Gorky was an Armenian-born American painter who had a seminal influence on abstract expressionism. De Kooning said: "I met a lot of artists — but then I met Gorky... He had an extraordinary gift for hitting the nail on the head; remarkable. So I immediately attached myself to him and we became very good friends."[19]

The 1940s in New York City heralded the triumph of American abstract expressionism, a modernist movement that combined lessons learned from Matisse, Picasso, Surrealism, Miró, Cubism, Fauvism, and early Modernism via great teachers in America such as Hans Hofmann from Germany and John D. Graham from Ukraine. Graham's influence on American art during the early 1940s was particularly visible in the work of Gorky, de Kooning, Pollock, and Richard Pousette-Dart among others. Gorky's contributions to American and world art are difficult to overestimate. His work as lyrical abstraction[20][21][22][23][24] was a "new language.[20] He "lit the way for two generations of American artists".[20] The painterly spontaneity of mature works such as The Liver is the Cock's Comb, The Betrothal II, and One Year the Milkweed immediately prefigured Abstract expressionism, and leaders in the New York School have acknowledged Gorky's considerable influence. The early work of Hyman Bloom was also influential.[25] American artists also benefited from the presence of Piet Mondrian, Fernand Léger, Max Ernst, and the André Breton group, Pierre Matisse's gallery, and Peggy Guggenheim's gallery The Art of This Century, as well as other factors. Hans Hofmann in particular as teacher, mentor, and artist was both important and influential to the development and success of abstract expressionism in the United States. Among Hofmann's protégés was Clement Greenberg, who became an enormously influential voice for American painting, and among his students was Lee Krasner, who introduced her teacher, Hofmann, to her husband, Jackson Pollock.[26]

Pollock and Abstract influences

During the late 1940s, Jackson Pollock's radical approach to painting revolutionized the potential for all Contemporary art that followed him. To some extent, Pollock realized that the journey toward making a work of art was as important as the work of art itself. Like Picasso's innovative reinventions of painting and sculpture near the turn of the century via Cubism and constructed sculpture, with influences as disparate as Navajo sand paintings, surrealism, Jungian analysis, and Mexican mural art,[27] Pollock redefined what it was to produce art. His move away from easel painting and conventionality was a liberating signal to the artists of his era and to all that came after. Artists realized that Jackson Pollock's process—the placing of unstretched raw canvas on the floor where it could be attacked from all four sides using artist materials and industrial materials; linear skeins of paint dripped and thrown; drawing, staining, brushing; imagery and non-imagery—essentially took art-making beyond any prior boundary. Abstract expressionism in general expanded and developed the definitions and possibilities that artists had available for the creation of new works of art.

The other abstract expressionists followed Pollock's breakthrough with new breakthroughs of their own. In a sense the innovations of Pollock, de Kooning, Franz Kline, Rothko, Philip Guston, Hans Hofmann, Clyfford Still, Barnett Newman, Ad Reinhardt, Richard Pousette-Dart, Robert Motherwell, Peter Voulkos, and others opened the floodgates to the diversity and scope of all the art that followed them. The radical Anti-Formalist movements of the 1960s and 1970s including Fluxus, Neo-Dada, Conceptual art, and the feminist art movement can be traced to the innovations of abstract expressionism. Rereadings into abstract art, done by art historians such as Linda Nochlin,[28] Griselda Pollock[29] and Catherine de Zegher[30] critically shows, however, that pioneer women artists who have produced major innovations in modern art had been ignored by the official accounts of its history, but finally began to achieve long overdue recognition in the wake of the abstract expressionist movement of the 1940s and 1950s. Abstract expressionism emerged as a major art movement in New York City during the 1950s and thereafter several leading art galleries began to include the abstract expressionists in exhibitions and as regulars in their rosters. Some of those prominent 'uptown' galleries included: the Charles Egan Gallery,[31] the Sidney Janis Gallery,[32] the Betty Parsons Gallery,[33] the Kootz Gallery,[34] the Tibor de Nagy Gallery, the Stable Gallery, the Leo Castelli Gallery as well as others; and several downtown galleries known at the time as the Tenth Street galleries exhibited many emerging younger artists working in the abstract expressionist vein.

Action painting

Action painting was a style widespread from the 1940s until the early 1960s, and is closely associated with abstract expressionism (some critics have used the terms action painting and abstract expressionism interchangeably). A comparison is often drawn between the American action painting and the French tachisme.

The term was coined by the American critic Harold Rosenberg in 1952[35] and signaled a major shift in the aesthetic perspective of New York School painters and critics. According to Rosenberg the canvas was "an arena in which to act". While abstract expressionists such as Jackson Pollock, Franz Kline and Willem de Kooning had long been outspoken in their view of a painting as an arena within which to come to terms with the act of creation, earlier critics sympathetic to their cause, like Clement Greenberg, focused on their works' "objectness." To Greenberg, it was the physicality of the paintings' clotted and oil-caked surfaces that was the key to understanding them as documents of the artists' existential struggle.

 
Boon by James Brooks, 1957, Tate Gallery

Rosenberg's critique shifted the emphasis from the object to the struggle itself, with the finished painting being only the physical manifestation, a kind of residue, of the actual work of art, which was in the act or process of the painting's creation. This spontaneous activity was the "action" of the painter, through arm and wrist movement, painterly gestures, brushstrokes, thrown paint, splashed, stained, scumbled and dripped. The painter would sometimes let the paint drip onto the canvas, while rhythmically dancing, or even standing in the canvas, sometimes letting the paint fall according to the subconscious mind, thus letting the unconscious part of the psyche assert and express itself. All this, however, is difficult to explain or interpret because it is a supposed unconscious manifestation of the act of pure creation.[36]

In practice, the term abstract expressionism is applied to any number of artists working (mostly) in New York who had quite different styles, and even applied to work which is not especially abstract nor expressionist. Pollock's energetic action paintings, with their "busy" feel, are different both technically and aesthetically, to De Kooning's violent and grotesque Women series. Woman V is one of a series of six paintings made by de Kooning between 1950 and 1953 that depict a three-quarter-length female figure. He began the first of these paintings, Woman I, in June 1950, repeatedly changing and painting out the image until January or February 1952, when the painting was abandoned unfinished. The art historian Meyer Schapiro saw the painting in de Kooning's studio soon afterwards and encouraged the artist to persist. De Kooning's response was to begin three other paintings on the same theme; Woman II, Woman III and Woman IV. During the summer of 1952, spent at East Hampton, de Kooning further explored the theme through drawings and pastels. He may have finished work on Woman I by the end of June, or possibly as late as November 1952, and probably the other three women pictures were concluded at much the same time.[37] The Woman series are decidedly figurative paintings.

Another important artist is Franz Kline.[38][39] As with Jackson Pollock and other abstract expressionists, Kline was labelled an "action painter" because of his seemingly spontaneous and intense style, focusing less, or not at all, on figures or imagery, but on the actual brushstrokes and use of canvas; as demonstrated by his painting Number 2 (1954).[40][41][42]

Automatic writing was an important vehicle for action painters such as Kline (in his black and white paintings), Pollock, Mark Tobey and Cy Twombly, who used gesture, surface, and line to create calligraphic, linear symbols and skeins that resemble language, and resonate as powerful manifestations from the Collective unconscious.[43][44] Robert Motherwell in his Elegy to the Spanish Republic series painted powerful black and white paintings using gesture, surface and symbol evoking powerful emotional charges.[45][46]

Meanwhile, other action painters, notably de Kooning, Gorky, Norman Bluhm, Joan Mitchell, and James Brooks, used imagery via either abstract landscape or as expressionistic visions of the figure to articulate their highly personal and powerful evocations. James Brooks' paintings were particularly poetic and highly prescient in relationship to Lyrical Abstraction that became prominent in the late 1960s and the 1970s.[47]

Color field

Clyfford Still, Barnett Newman, Adolph Gottlieb and the serenely shimmering blocks of color in Mark Rothko's work (which is not what would usually be called expressionist and which Rothko denied was abstract), are classified as abstract expressionists, albeit from what Clement Greenberg termed the Color field direction of abstract expressionism. Both Hans Hofmann and Robert Motherwell can be comfortably described as practitioners of Action painting and Color field painting. In the 1940s Richard Pousette-Dart's tightly constructed imagery often depended upon themes of mythology and mysticism; as did the paintings of Gottlieb, and Pollock in that decade as well.

Color Field painting initially referred to a particular type of abstract expressionism, especially the work of Rothko, Still, Newman, Motherwell, Gottlieb, Ad Reinhardt and several series of paintings by Joan Miró. Greenberg perceived Color Field painting as related to but different from Action painting. The Color Field painters sought to rid their art of superfluous rhetoric. Artists like Motherwell, Still, Rothko, Gottlieb, Hans Hofmann, Helen Frankenthaler, Sam Francis, Mark Tobey, and especially Ad Reinhardt and Barnett Newman, whose masterpiece Vir heroicus sublimis is in the collection of MoMA, used greatly reduced references to nature, and they painted with a highly articulated and psychological use of color. In general, these artists eliminated recognizable imagery, in the case of Rothko and Gottlieb sometimes using symbols and signs as a replacement of imagery.[48] Certain artists quoted references to past or present art, but in general color field painting presents abstraction as an end in itself. In pursuing this direction of modern art, artists wanted to present each painting as one unified, cohesive, monolithic image.

In distinction to the emotional energy and gestural surface marks of abstract expressionists such as Pollock and de Kooning, the Color Field painters initially appeared to be cool and austere, effacing the individual mark in favor of large, flat areas of color, which these artists considered to be the essential nature of visual abstraction, along with the actual shape of the canvas, which later in the 1960s Frank Stella in particular achieved in unusual ways with combinations of curved and straight edges. However, Color Field painting has proven to be both sensual and deeply expressive albeit in a different way from gestural abstract expressionism.

Although abstract expressionism spread quickly throughout the United States, the major centers of this style were New York City and California, especially in the New York School, and the San Francisco Bay area. Abstract expressionist paintings share certain characteristics, including the use of large canvases, an "all-over" approach, in which the whole canvas is treated with equal importance (as opposed to the center being of more interest than the edges). The canvas as the arena became a credo of Action painting, while the integrity of the picture plane became a credo of the Color field painters. Younger artists began exhibiting their abstract expressionist related paintings during the 1950s as well including Alfred Leslie, Sam Francis, Joan Mitchell, Helen Frankenthaler, Cy Twombly, Milton Resnick, Michael Goldberg, Norman Bluhm, Grace Hartigan, Friedel Dzubas, and Robert Goodnough among others.

 
William Baziotes, Cyclops, 1947, oil on canvas, Chicago Art Institute. Baziotes' abstract expressionist works show the influence of Surrealism

Although Pollock is closely associated with Action Painting because of his style, technique, and his painterly touch and his physical application of paint, art critics have likened Pollock to both Action painting and color field painting. Another critical view advanced by Greenberg connects Pollock's allover canvasses to the large-scale Water Lilies of Claude Monet done during the 1920s. Art critics such as Michael Fried, Greenberg and others have observed that the overall feeling in Pollock's most famous works – his drip paintings – read as vast fields of built-up linear elements. They note that these works often read as vast complexes of similarly-valued paint skeins and all-over fields of color and drawing, and are related to the mural-sized Monets which are similarly constructed of close-valued brushed and scumbled marks that also read as fields of color and drawing. Pollock's use of all-over composition lend a philosophical and a physical connection to the way the color field painters like Newman, Rothko and Still construct their unbroken and in Still's case broken surfaces. In several paintings that Pollock painted after his classic drip painting period of 1947–1950, he used the technique of staining fluid oil paint and house paint into raw canvas. During 1951 he produced a series of semi-figurative black stain paintings, and in 1952 he produced stain paintings using color. In his November 1952 exhibition at the Sidney Janis Gallery in New York City Pollock showed Number 12, 1952, a large, masterful stain painting that resembles a brightly colored stained landscape (with an overlay of broadly dripped dark paint); the painting was acquired from the exhibition by Nelson Rockefeller for his personal collection.[49]

While Arshile Gorky is considered to be one of the founding fathers of abstract expressionism and a surrealist, he was also one of the first painters of the New York School who used the technique of staining. Gorky created broad fields of vivid, open, unbroken color that he used in many of his paintings as grounds. In Gorky's most effective and accomplished paintings between the years 1941–1948, he consistently used intense stained fields of color, often letting the paint run and drip, under and around his familiar lexicon of organic and biomorphic shapes and delicate lines. Another abstract expressionist whose works in the 1940s call to mind the stain paintings of the 1960s and the 1970s is James Brooks. Brooks regularly used stain as a technique in his paintings from the late 1940s. Brooks began diluting his oil paint in order to have fluid colors with which to pour and drip and stain into the mostly raw canvas that he used. These works often combined calligraphy and abstract shapes. During the final three decades of his career, Sam Francis' style of large-scale bright abstract expressionism was closely associated with Color field painting. His paintings straddled both camps within the abstract expressionist rubric, Action painting and Color Field painting.

Having seen Pollock's 1951 paintings of thinned black oil paint stained into raw canvas, Frankenthaler began to produce stain paintings in varied oil colors on raw canvas in 1952. Her most famous painting from that period is Mountains and Sea. She is one of the originators of the Color Field movement that emerged in the late 1950s.[50] Frankenthaler also studied with Hans Hofmann.

Hofmann's paintings are a symphony of color as seen in The Gate, 1959–1960. He was renowned not only as an artist but also as a teacher of art, both in his native Germany and later in the US. Hofmann, who came to the United States from Germany in the early 1930s, brought with him the legacy of Modernism. As a young artist in pre-First World War Paris, Hofmann worked with Robert Delaunay, and he knew firsthand the innovative work of both Picasso and Matisse. Matisse's work had an enormous influence on him, and on his understanding of the expressive language of color and the potentiality of abstraction. Hofmann was one of the first theorists of color field painting, and his theories were influential to artists and to critics, particularly to Clement Greenberg, as well as to others during the 1930s and 1940s. In 1953 Morris Louis and Kenneth Noland were both profoundly influenced by Helen Frankenthaler's stain paintings after visiting her studio in New York City. Returning to Washington, DC., they began to produce the major works that created the color field movement in the late 1950s.[51]

In 1972 then Metropolitan Museum of Art curator Henry Geldzahler said:

Clement Greenberg included the work of both Morris Louis and Kenneth Noland in a show that he did at the Kootz Gallery in the early 1950s. Clem was the first to see their potential. He invited them up to New York in 1953, I think it was, to Helen's studio to see a painting that she had just done called Mountains and Sea, a very, very beautiful painting, which was in a sense, out of Pollock and out of Gorky. It also was one of the first stain pictures, one of the first large field pictures in which the stain technique was used, perhaps the first one. Louis and Noland saw the picture unrolled on the floor of her studio and went back to Washington, DC., and worked together for a while, working at the implications of this kind of painting.[52][53]

In the 1960s after abstract expressionism

In abstract painting during the 1950s and 1960s, several new directions, like the Hard-edge painting exemplified by John McLaughlin, emerged. Meanwhile, as a reaction against the subjectivism of abstract expressionism, other forms of Geometric abstraction began to appear in artist studios and in radical avant-garde circles. Greenberg became the voice of Post-painterly abstraction; by curating an influential exhibition of new painting that toured important art museums throughout the United States in 1964. Color field painting, Hard-edge painting and Lyrical Abstraction[54] emerged as radical new directions.

Abstract expressionism and the Cold War

Since the mid-1970s it has been argued that the style attracted the attention, in the early 1950s, of the CIA, who saw it as representative of the US as a haven of free thought and free markets, as well as a challenge to both the socialist realist styles prevalent in communist nations and the dominance of the European art markets.[55] The book by Frances Stonor Saunders,[citation needed] The Cultural Cold War—The CIA and the World of Arts and Letters,[56] (published in the UK as Who Paid the Piper?: CIA and the Cultural Cold War) details how the CIA financed and organized the promotion of American abstract expressionists as part of cultural imperialism via the Congress for Cultural Freedom from 1950 to 1967. Notably Robert Motherwell's series Elegy to the Spanish Republic addressed some of those political issues. Tom Braden, founding chief of the CIA's International Organizations Division (IOD) and ex-executive secretary of the Museum of Modern Art said in an interview, "I think it was the most important division that the agency had, and I think that it played an enormous role in the Cold War."[57]

Against this revisionist tradition, an essay by Michael Kimmelman, chief art critic of The New York Times, called Revisiting the Revisionists: The Modern, Its Critics and the Cold War, asserts that much of that information concerning what was happening on the American art scene during the 1940s and 50s, as well as the revisionists' interpretation of it, is false or decontextualized.[58] Other books on the subject include Art in the Cold War, by Christine Lindey, which also describes the art of the Soviet Union at the same time, and Pollock and After, edited by Francis Frascina, which reprinted the Kimmelman article.

Consequences

 
Jean-Paul Riopelle, 1951, Untitled, oil on canvas, 54 x 64.7 cm (21 1/4 x 25 1/2 in.), private collection

Canadian painter Jean-Paul Riopelle (1923–2002), a member of the Montreal-based surrealist-inspired group Les Automatistes, helped introduce a related style of abstract impressionism to the Parisian art world from 1949. Michel Tapié's groundbreaking book, Un Art Autre (1952), was also enormously influential in this regard. Tapié was also a curator and exhibition organizer who promoted the works of Pollock and Hans Hofmann in Europe. By the 1960s, the movement's initial effect had been assimilated, yet its methods and proponents remained highly influential in art, affecting profoundly the work of many artists who followed. Abstract expressionism preceded Tachisme, Color Field painting, Lyrical Abstraction, Fluxus, Pop Art, Minimalism, Postminimalism, Neo-expressionism, and the other movements of the sixties and seventies and it influenced all those later movements that evolved. Movements which were direct responses to, and rebellions against abstract expressionism began with Hard-edge painting (Frank Stella, Robert Indiana and others) and Pop artists, notably Andy Warhol, Claes Oldenburg and Roy Lichtenstein who achieved prominence in the US, accompanied by Richard Hamilton in Britain. Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns in the US formed a bridge between abstract expressionism and Pop art. Minimalism was exemplified by artists such as Donald Judd, Robert Mangold and Agnes Martin.

However, many painters, such as Jules Olitski, Joan Mitchell and Antoni Tàpies continued to work in the abstract expressionist style for many years, extending and expanding its visual and philosophical implications, as many abstract artists continue to do today, in styles described as Lyrical Abstraction, Neo-expressionist and others.

In the years after World War II, a group of New York artists started one of the first true schools of artists in America, bringing about a new era in American artwork: abstract expressionism. This led to the American art boom that brought about styles such as Pop Art. This also helped to make New York into a cultural and artistic hub.[59]

Abstract Expressionists value the organism over the static whole, becoming over being, expression over perfection, vitality over finish, fluctuation over repose, feeling over formulation, the unknown over the known, the veiled over the clear, the individual over society and the inner over the outer.[60]

— William C. Seitz, American artist and Art historian

Major sculpture

List of abstract expressionists

Abstract expressionist artists

Significant artists whose mature work defined American abstract expressionism:

Other artists

Significant artists whose mature work relates to the American abstract expressionist movement:

See also

Related styles, trends, schools, and movements

Other related topics

  • Bluebeard, by Kurt Vonnegut, is a fictional autobiography written by fictional abstract expressionist Rabo Karabekian.
  • Ismail Gulgee (artist whose work reflects abstract expressionist influence in South Asia during the Cold War, especially 'action painting')
  • Michel Tapié (critic and exhibition organizer important to the dissemination of abstract expressionism in Europe, Japan, and Latin America)

References

  1. ^ Editors of Phaidon Press (2001). The 20th-Century art book (Reprinted. ed.). London: Phaidon Press. ISBN 0714835420.
  2. ^ Hess, Barbara; "Abstract Expressionism", 2005
  3. ^ Andreas Neufert, Auf Liebe und Tod, Das Leben des Surrealisten Wolfgang Paalen, Berlin (Parthas) 2015, S. 494ff.
  4. ^ Barnett Newman Foundation, archive 18/103
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Books

  • Belgrad, Daniel. The Culture of Spontaneity. Improvisation and the Arts in Postwar America University of Chicago Press, Chicago & London, 1998. ISBN 978-966-359-305-0
  • Anfam, David. Abstract Expressionism (New York & London: Thames & Hudson, 1990). ISBN 0-500-20243-5
  • Craven, David, Abstract expressionism as cultural critique: dissent during the McCarthy period (Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press, 1999.) ISBN 0-521-43415-7
  • Marika Herskovic, American Abstract and Figurative Expressionism: Style Is Timely Art Is Timeless (New York School Press, 2009.) ISBN 978-0-9677994-2-1
  • Marika Herskovic, American Abstract Expressionism of the 1950s An Illustrated Survey, (New York School Press, 2003.) ISBN 0-9677994-1-4
  • Marika Herskovic, New York School Abstract Expressionists Artists Choice by Artists, (New York School Press, 2000.) ISBN 0-9677994-0-6
  • Papanikolas, Theresa and Stephen Salel, Stephen, Abstract Expressionism, Looking East from the Far West, Honolulu Museum of Art, 2017, ISBN 9780937426920
  • Serge Guilbaut. How New York Stole the Idea of Modern Art, University of Chicago Press, 1983.

Bibliography

  • Anfam, David. Abstract Expressionism—A World Elsewhere. New York: Haunch of Venison, 2008,
  • Greenberg, Clement. "'American-Type' Painting". In Art and Culture: Critical Essays. Boston: Beacon Press, 1961. 208–29.
  • Jachec, Nancy. The Philosophy and Politics of Abstract Expressionism 1940–1960. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, 2000 ISBN 0-521-65154-9
  • O'Connor, Francis V. Jackson Pollock [exhibition catalogue] (New York, Museum of Modern Art, [1967]) OCLC 165852
  • Saunders, Frances Stonor, The cultural cold war: the CIA and the world of arts and letters (New York: New Press: Distributed by W.W. Norton & Co., 2000) ISBN 1-56584-596-X
  • Tapié, Michel. Hans Hofmann: peintures 1962 : 23 avril-18 mai 1963. (Paris: Galerie Anderson-Mayer, 1963.) [exhibition catalogue and commentary] OCLC 62515192
  • Tapié, Michel. Pollock (Paris, P. Facchetti, 1952) OCLC 30601793
  • Wechsler, Jeffrey (2007). Pathways and Parallels: Roads to Abstract Expressionism. New York: Hollis Taggart Galleries. ISBN 978-0-9759954-9-5.

External links

  • Louis Schanker
  • Perle Fine
  • Perle Fine Abstract Expressionism-1950s New York action painter on YouTube
  • Albert Kotin
  • Albert Kotin Abstract Expressionism 1950s-New York School 1950s action painting on YouTube
  • James Brooks Abstract Expressionism-New York School 1950s action painting on YouTube
  • American Abstract Artists
  • Beginning of the New York School 1950s-Abstract Expressionism of the 1950s on YouTube
  • Clyfford Still Museum
  • Abstract expressionism 1950s-New York School Artists of the 9th St Show Reminisce on YouTube
  • 9th Street Art Exhibition-abstract expressionist artists reminisce on YouTube
  • Nicolas Carone-Abstract Expressionism-Artist of the 9th St. Show on YouTube
  • Conrad Marca-Relli Abstract Expressionism 1950s-New York School collage-painter on YouTube
  • Robert Richenburg Abstract Expressionism 1950s-New York School 1950s on YouTube
  • Joe Stefanelli Abstract Expressionism 1950s-New York School 1950s on YouTube
  • What is Abstract Expressionism? on YouTube

abstract, expressionism, confused, with, abstract, abstract, impressionism, expressionism, post, world, movement, american, painting, developed, york, city, 1940s, first, specifically, american, movement, achieve, international, influence, york, center, wester. Not to be confused with Abstract art Abstract impressionism or Expressionism Abstract expressionism is a post World War II art movement in American painting developed in New York City in the 1940s 1 It was the first specifically American movement to achieve international influence and put New York at the center of the Western art world a role formerly filled by Paris Abstract expressionismYears activeLate 1940s presentCountryUnited States specifically New York CityMajor figuresClyfford Still Jackson Pollock Willem de Kooning Arshile Gorky Mark Rothko Lee Krasner Robert Motherwell Franz Kline Adolph Gottlieb David Smith Hans Hofmann Joan MitchellInfluencesModernism Expressionism Wassily Kandinsky Surrealism Cubism DadaAlthough the term abstract expressionism was first applied to American art in 1946 by the art critic Robert Coates it had been first used in Germany in 1919 in the magazine Der Sturm regarding German Expressionism In the United States Alfred Barr was the first to use this term in 1929 in relation to works by Wassily Kandinsky 2 Contents 1 Style 2 Art critics of the post World War II era 3 History 3 1 World War II and the Post War period 3 1 1 Gorky Hofmann and Graham 3 1 2 Pollock and Abstract influences 3 1 3 Action painting 3 1 4 Color field 3 1 5 In the 1960s after abstract expressionism 4 Abstract expressionism and the Cold War 5 Consequences 6 Major sculpture 7 List of abstract expressionists 7 1 Abstract expressionist artists 7 2 Other artists 8 See also 8 1 Related styles trends schools and movements 8 2 Other related topics 9 References 10 Books 11 Bibliography 12 External linksStyle Edit David Smith Cubi VI 1963 Israel Museum Jerusalem David Smith was one of the most influential American sculptors of the 20th century Technically an important predecessor is surrealism with its emphasis on spontaneous automatic or subconscious creation Jackson Pollock s dripping paint onto a canvas laid on the floor is a technique that has its roots in the work of Andre Masson Max Ernst and David Alfaro Siqueiros The newer research tends to put the exile surrealist Wolfgang Paalen in the position of the artist and theoretician who fostered the theory of the viewer dependent possibility space through his paintings and his magazine DYN Paalen considered ideas of quantum mechanics as well as idiosyncratic interpretations of the totemic vision and the spatial structure of native Indian painting from British Columbia and prepared the ground for the new spatial vision of the young American abstracts His long essay Totem Art 1943 had considerable influence on such artists as Martha Graham Isamu Noguchi Pollock Mark Rothko and Barnett Newman 3 Around 1944 Barnett Newman tried to explain America s newest art movement and included a list of the men in the new movement Paalen is mentioned twice other artists mentioned are Gottlieb Rothko Pollock Hofmann Baziotes Gorky and others Robert Motherwell is mentioned with a question mark 4 Another important early manifestation of what came to be abstract expressionism is the work of American Northwest artist Mark Tobey especially his white writing canvases which though generally not large in scale anticipate the all over look of Pollock s drip paintings The movement s name is derived from the combination of the emotional intensity and self denial of the German Expressionists with the anti figurative aesthetic of the European abstract schools such as Futurism the Bauhaus and Synthetic Cubism Additionally it has an image of being rebellious anarchic highly idiosyncratic and some feel nihilistic 5 In practice the term is applied to any number of artists working mostly in New York who had quite different styles and even to work that is neither especially abstract nor expressionist California abstract expressionist Jay Meuser who typically painted in the non objective style wrote about his painting Mare Nostrum It is far better to capture the glorious spirit of the sea than to paint all of its tiny ripples Pollock s energetic action paintings with their busy feel are different both technically and aesthetically from the violent and grotesque Women series of Willem de Kooning s figurative paintings and the rectangles of color in Rothko s Color Field paintings which are not what would usually be called expressionist and which Rothko denied were abstract Yet all four artists are classified as abstract expressionists Abstract expressionism has many stylistic similarities to the Russian artists of the early 20th century such as Wassily Kandinsky Although it is true that spontaneity or the impression of spontaneity characterized many of the abstract expressionists works most of these paintings involved careful planning especially since their large size demanded it With artists such as Paul Klee Kandinsky Emma Kunz and later on Rothko Newman and Agnes Martin abstract art clearly implied expression of ideas concerning the spiritual the unconscious and the mind 6 Why this style gained mainstream acceptance in the 1950s is a matter of debate American social realism had been the mainstream in the 1930s It had been influenced not only by the Great Depression but also by the Mexican muralists such as David Alfaro Siqueiros and Diego Rivera The political climate after World War II did not long tolerate the social protests of these painters Abstract expressionism arose during the war and began to be showcased during the early forties at galleries in New York such as The Art of This Century Gallery The post war McCarthy era was a time of artistic censorship in the United States but if the subject matter were totally abstract then it would be seen as apolitical and therefore safe Or if the art was political the message was largely for the insiders 7 While the movement is closely associated with painting collagist Anne Ryan and certain sculptors in particular were also integral to abstract expressionism 8 David Smith and his wife Dorothy Dehner Herbert Ferber Isamu Noguchi Ibram Lassaw Theodore Roszak Phillip Pavia Mary Callery Richard Stankiewicz Louise Bourgeois and Louise Nevelson in particular were some of the sculptors considered as being important members of the movement In addition the artists David Hare John Chamberlain James Rosati Mark di Suvero and sculptors Richard Lippold Raoul Hague George Rickey Reuben Nakian and even Tony Smith Seymour Lipton Joseph Cornell and several others 9 were integral parts of the abstract expressionist movement Many of the sculptors listed participated in the Ninth Street Show 9 a famous exhibition curated by Leo Castelli on East Ninth Street in New York City in 1951 Besides the painters and sculptors of the period the New York School of abstract expressionism also generated a number of supportive poets including Frank O Hara and photographers such as Aaron Siskind and Fred McDarrah whose book The Artist s World in Pictures documented the New York School during the 1950s and filmmakers notably Robert Frank as well Although the abstract expressionist school spread quickly throughout the United States the epicenters of this style were New York City and the San Francisco Bay area of California Art critics of the post World War II era EditAt a certain moment the canvas began to appear to one American painter after another as an arena in which to act What was to go on the canvas was not a picture but an event Harold Rosenberg 10 In the 1940s there were not only few galleries The Art of This Century Pierre Matisse Gallery Julien Levy Gallery and a few others but also few critics who were willing to follow the work of the New York Vanguard There were also a few artists with a literary background among them Robert Motherwell and Barnett Newman who functioned as critics as well While the New York avant garde was still relatively unknown by the late 1940s most of the artists who have become household names today had their well established patron critics Clement Greenberg advocated Jackson Pollock and the color field painters like Clyfford Still Mark Rothko Barnett Newman Adolph Gottlieb and Hans Hofmann Harold Rosenberg seemed to prefer the action painters such as Willem de Kooning and Franz Kline as well as the seminal paintings of Arshile Gorky Thomas B Hess the managing editor of ARTnews championed Willem de Kooning The new critics elevated their proteges by casting other artists as followers 11 or ignoring those who did not serve their promotional goal In 1958 Mark Tobey became the first American painter since Whistler 1895 to win top prize at the Venice Biennale 12 Barnett Newman Onement 1 1948 During the 1940s Barnett Newman wrote several articles about the new American painting Barnett Newman a late member of the Uptown Group wrote catalogue forewords and reviews and by the late 1940s became an exhibiting artist at Betty Parsons Gallery His first solo show was in 1948 Soon after his first exhibition Barnett Newman remarked in one of the Artists Sessions at Studio 35 We are in the process of making the world to a certain extent in our own image 13 Utilizing his writing skills Newman fought every step of the way to reinforce his newly established image as an artist and to promote his work An example is his letter on April 9 1955 Letter to Sidney Janis it is true that Rothko talks the fighter He fights however to submit to the philistine world My struggle against bourgeois society has involved the total rejection of it 14 Strangely the person thought to have had most to do with the promotion of this style was a New York Trotskyist Clement Greenberg As long time art critic for the Partisan Review and The Nation he became an early and literate proponent of abstract expressionism The well heeled artist Robert Motherwell joined Greenberg in promoting a style that fit the political climate and the intellectual rebelliousness of the era Greenberg proclaimed abstract expressionism and Pollock in particular as the epitome of aesthetic value He supported Pollock s work on formalistic grounds as simply the best painting of its day and the culmination of an art tradition going back via Cubism and Cezanne to Monet in which painting became ever purer and more concentrated in what was essential to it the making of marks on a flat surface 15 Pollock s work has always polarised critics Rosenberg spoke of the transformation of painting into an existential drama in Pollock s work in which what was to go on the canvas was not a picture but an event The big moment came when it was decided to paint just to paint The gesture on the canvas was a gesture of liberation from value political aesthetic moral 16 One of the most vocal critics of abstract expressionism at the time was The New York Times art critic John Canaday Meyer Schapiro and Leo Steinberg along with Greenberg and Rosenberg were important art historians of the post war era who voiced support for abstract expressionism During the early to mid sixties younger art critics Michael Fried Rosalind Krauss and Robert Hughes added considerable insights into the critical dialectic that continues to grow around abstract expressionism History EditWorld War II and the Post War period Edit Richard Pousette Dart Symphony No 1 The Transcendental 1941 42 During the period leading up to and during World War II modernist artists writers and poets as well as important collectors and dealers fled Europe and the onslaught of the Nazis for safe haven in the United States Many of those who didn t flee perished Among the artists and collectors who arrived in New York during the war some with help from Varian Fry were Hans Namuth Yves Tanguy Kay Sage Max Ernst Jimmy Ernst Peggy Guggenheim Leo Castelli Marcel Duchamp Andre Masson Roberto Matta Andre Breton Marc Chagall Jacques Lipchitz Fernand Leger and Piet Mondrian A few artists notably Picasso Matisse and Pierre Bonnard remained in France and survived The post war period left the capitals of Europe in upheaval with an urgency to economically and physically rebuild and to politically regroup In Paris formerly the center of European culture and capital of the art world the climate for art was a disaster and New York replaced Paris as the new center of the art world Post war Europe saw the continuation of Surrealism Cubism Dada and the works of Matisse Also in Europe Art brut 17 and Lyrical Abstraction or Tachisme the European equivalent to abstract expressionism took hold of the newest generation Serge Poliakoff Nicolas de Stael Georges Mathieu Vieira da Silva Jean Dubuffet Yves Klein Pierre Soulages and Jean Messagier among others are considered important figures in post war European painting 18 In the United States a new generation of American artists began to emerge and to dominate the world stage and they were called Abstract Expressionists Gorky Hofmann and Graham Edit Arshile Gorky The Liver is the Cock s Comb 1944 oil on canvas 731 4 98 186 249 cm Albright Knox Art Gallery Buffalo New York Gorky was an Armenian born American painter who had a seminal influence on abstract expressionism De Kooning said I met a lot of artists but then I met Gorky He had an extraordinary gift for hitting the nail on the head remarkable So I immediately attached myself to him and we became very good friends 19 The 1940s in New York City heralded the triumph of American abstract expressionism a modernist movement that combined lessons learned from Matisse Picasso Surrealism Miro Cubism Fauvism and early Modernism via great teachers in America such as Hans Hofmann from Germany and John D Graham from Ukraine Graham s influence on American art during the early 1940s was particularly visible in the work of Gorky de Kooning Pollock and Richard Pousette Dart among others Gorky s contributions to American and world art are difficult to overestimate His work as lyrical abstraction 20 21 22 23 24 was a new language 20 He lit the way for two generations of American artists 20 The painterly spontaneity of mature works such as The Liver is the Cock s Comb The Betrothal II and One Year the Milkweed immediately prefigured Abstract expressionism and leaders in the New York School have acknowledged Gorky s considerable influence The early work of Hyman Bloom was also influential 25 American artists also benefited from the presence of Piet Mondrian Fernand Leger Max Ernst and the Andre Breton group Pierre Matisse s gallery and Peggy Guggenheim s gallery The Art of This Century as well as other factors Hans Hofmann in particular as teacher mentor and artist was both important and influential to the development and success of abstract expressionism in the United States Among Hofmann s proteges was Clement Greenberg who became an enormously influential voice for American painting and among his students was Lee Krasner who introduced her teacher Hofmann to her husband Jackson Pollock 26 Pollock and Abstract influences Edit During the late 1940s Jackson Pollock s radical approach to painting revolutionized the potential for all Contemporary art that followed him To some extent Pollock realized that the journey toward making a work of art was as important as the work of art itself Like Picasso s innovative reinventions of painting and sculpture near the turn of the century via Cubism and constructed sculpture with influences as disparate as Navajo sand paintings surrealism Jungian analysis and Mexican mural art 27 Pollock redefined what it was to produce art His move away from easel painting and conventionality was a liberating signal to the artists of his era and to all that came after Artists realized that Jackson Pollock s process the placing of unstretched raw canvas on the floor where it could be attacked from all four sides using artist materials and industrial materials linear skeins of paint dripped and thrown drawing staining brushing imagery and non imagery essentially took art making beyond any prior boundary Abstract expressionism in general expanded and developed the definitions and possibilities that artists had available for the creation of new works of art The other abstract expressionists followed Pollock s breakthrough with new breakthroughs of their own In a sense the innovations of Pollock de Kooning Franz Kline Rothko Philip Guston Hans Hofmann Clyfford Still Barnett Newman Ad Reinhardt Richard Pousette Dart Robert Motherwell Peter Voulkos and others opened the floodgates to the diversity and scope of all the art that followed them The radical Anti Formalist movements of the 1960s and 1970s including Fluxus Neo Dada Conceptual art and the feminist art movement can be traced to the innovations of abstract expressionism Rereadings into abstract art done by art historians such as Linda Nochlin 28 Griselda Pollock 29 and Catherine de Zegher 30 critically shows however that pioneer women artists who have produced major innovations in modern art had been ignored by the official accounts of its history but finally began to achieve long overdue recognition in the wake of the abstract expressionist movement of the 1940s and 1950s Abstract expressionism emerged as a major art movement in New York City during the 1950s and thereafter several leading art galleries began to include the abstract expressionists in exhibitions and as regulars in their rosters Some of those prominent uptown galleries included the Charles Egan Gallery 31 the Sidney Janis Gallery 32 the Betty Parsons Gallery 33 the Kootz Gallery 34 the Tibor de Nagy Gallery the Stable Gallery the Leo Castelli Gallery as well as others and several downtown galleries known at the time as the Tenth Street galleries exhibited many emerging younger artists working in the abstract expressionist vein Action painting Edit Action painting was a style widespread from the 1940s until the early 1960s and is closely associated with abstract expressionism some critics have used the terms action painting and abstract expressionism interchangeably A comparison is often drawn between the American action painting and the French tachisme The term was coined by the American critic Harold Rosenberg in 1952 35 and signaled a major shift in the aesthetic perspective of New York School painters and critics According to Rosenberg the canvas was an arena in which to act While abstract expressionists such as Jackson Pollock Franz Kline and Willem de Kooning had long been outspoken in their view of a painting as an arena within which to come to terms with the act of creation earlier critics sympathetic to their cause like Clement Greenberg focused on their works objectness To Greenberg it was the physicality of the paintings clotted and oil caked surfaces that was the key to understanding them as documents of the artists existential struggle Boon by James Brooks 1957 Tate Gallery Rosenberg s critique shifted the emphasis from the object to the struggle itself with the finished painting being only the physical manifestation a kind of residue of the actual work of art which was in the act or process of the painting s creation This spontaneous activity was the action of the painter through arm and wrist movement painterly gestures brushstrokes thrown paint splashed stained scumbled and dripped The painter would sometimes let the paint drip onto the canvas while rhythmically dancing or even standing in the canvas sometimes letting the paint fall according to the subconscious mind thus letting the unconscious part of the psyche assert and express itself All this however is difficult to explain or interpret because it is a supposed unconscious manifestation of the act of pure creation 36 In practice the term abstract expressionism is applied to any number of artists working mostly in New York who had quite different styles and even applied to work which is not especially abstract nor expressionist Pollock s energetic action paintings with their busy feel are different both technically and aesthetically to De Kooning s violent and grotesque Women series Woman V is one of a series of six paintings made by de Kooning between 1950 and 1953 that depict a three quarter length female figure He began the first of these paintings Woman I in June 1950 repeatedly changing and painting out the image until January or February 1952 when the painting was abandoned unfinished The art historian Meyer Schapiro saw the painting in de Kooning s studio soon afterwards and encouraged the artist to persist De Kooning s response was to begin three other paintings on the same theme Woman II Woman III and Woman IV During the summer of 1952 spent at East Hampton de Kooning further explored the theme through drawings and pastels He may have finished work on Woman I by the end of June or possibly as late as November 1952 and probably the other three women pictures were concluded at much the same time 37 The Woman series are decidedly figurative paintings Another important artist is Franz Kline 38 39 As with Jackson Pollock and other abstract expressionists Kline was labelled an action painter because of his seemingly spontaneous and intense style focusing less or not at all on figures or imagery but on the actual brushstrokes and use of canvas as demonstrated by his painting Number 2 1954 40 41 42 Automatic writing was an important vehicle for action painters such as Kline in his black and white paintings Pollock Mark Tobey and Cy Twombly who used gesture surface and line to create calligraphic linear symbols and skeins that resemble language and resonate as powerful manifestations from the Collective unconscious 43 44 Robert Motherwell in his Elegy to the Spanish Republic series painted powerful black and white paintings using gesture surface and symbol evoking powerful emotional charges 45 46 Meanwhile other action painters notably de Kooning Gorky Norman Bluhm Joan Mitchell and James Brooks used imagery via either abstract landscape or as expressionistic visions of the figure to articulate their highly personal and powerful evocations James Brooks paintings were particularly poetic and highly prescient in relationship to Lyrical Abstraction that became prominent in the late 1960s and the 1970s 47 Color field Edit Clyfford Still Barnett Newman Adolph Gottlieb and the serenely shimmering blocks of color in Mark Rothko s work which is not what would usually be called expressionist and which Rothko denied was abstract are classified as abstract expressionists albeit from what Clement Greenberg termed the Color field direction of abstract expressionism Both Hans Hofmann and Robert Motherwell can be comfortably described as practitioners of Action painting and Color field painting In the 1940s Richard Pousette Dart s tightly constructed imagery often depended upon themes of mythology and mysticism as did the paintings of Gottlieb and Pollock in that decade as well Color Field painting initially referred to a particular type of abstract expressionism especially the work of Rothko Still Newman Motherwell Gottlieb Ad Reinhardt and several series of paintings by Joan Miro Greenberg perceived Color Field painting as related to but different from Action painting The Color Field painters sought to rid their art of superfluous rhetoric Artists like Motherwell Still Rothko Gottlieb Hans Hofmann Helen Frankenthaler Sam Francis Mark Tobey and especially Ad Reinhardt and Barnett Newman whose masterpiece Vir heroicus sublimis is in the collection of MoMA used greatly reduced references to nature and they painted with a highly articulated and psychological use of color In general these artists eliminated recognizable imagery in the case of Rothko and Gottlieb sometimes using symbols and signs as a replacement of imagery 48 Certain artists quoted references to past or present art but in general color field painting presents abstraction as an end in itself In pursuing this direction of modern art artists wanted to present each painting as one unified cohesive monolithic image In distinction to the emotional energy and gestural surface marks of abstract expressionists such as Pollock and de Kooning the Color Field painters initially appeared to be cool and austere effacing the individual mark in favor of large flat areas of color which these artists considered to be the essential nature of visual abstraction along with the actual shape of the canvas which later in the 1960s Frank Stella in particular achieved in unusual ways with combinations of curved and straight edges However Color Field painting has proven to be both sensual and deeply expressive albeit in a different way from gestural abstract expressionism Although abstract expressionism spread quickly throughout the United States the major centers of this style were New York City and California especially in the New York School and the San Francisco Bay area Abstract expressionist paintings share certain characteristics including the use of large canvases an all over approach in which the whole canvas is treated with equal importance as opposed to the center being of more interest than the edges The canvas as the arena became a credo of Action painting while the integrity of the picture plane became a credo of the Color field painters Younger artists began exhibiting their abstract expressionist related paintings during the 1950s as well including Alfred Leslie Sam Francis Joan Mitchell Helen Frankenthaler Cy Twombly Milton Resnick Michael Goldberg Norman Bluhm Grace Hartigan Friedel Dzubas and Robert Goodnough among others William Baziotes Cyclops 1947 oil on canvas Chicago Art Institute Baziotes abstract expressionist works show the influence of Surrealism Although Pollock is closely associated with Action Painting because of his style technique and his painterly touch and his physical application of paint art critics have likened Pollock to both Action painting and color field painting Another critical view advanced by Greenberg connects Pollock s allover canvasses to the large scale Water Lilies of Claude Monet done during the 1920s Art critics such as Michael Fried Greenberg and others have observed that the overall feeling in Pollock s most famous works his drip paintings read as vast fields of built up linear elements They note that these works often read as vast complexes of similarly valued paint skeins and all over fields of color and drawing and are related to the mural sized Monets which are similarly constructed of close valued brushed and scumbled marks that also read as fields of color and drawing Pollock s use of all over composition lend a philosophical and a physical connection to the way the color field painters like Newman Rothko and Still construct their unbroken and in Still s case broken surfaces In several paintings that Pollock painted after his classic drip painting period of 1947 1950 he used the technique of staining fluid oil paint and house paint into raw canvas During 1951 he produced a series of semi figurative black stain paintings and in 1952 he produced stain paintings using color In his November 1952 exhibition at the Sidney Janis Gallery in New York City Pollock showed Number 12 1952 a large masterful stain painting that resembles a brightly colored stained landscape with an overlay of broadly dripped dark paint the painting was acquired from the exhibition by Nelson Rockefeller for his personal collection 49 While Arshile Gorky is considered to be one of the founding fathers of abstract expressionism and a surrealist he was also one of the first painters of the New York School who used the technique of staining Gorky created broad fields of vivid open unbroken color that he used in many of his paintings as grounds In Gorky s most effective and accomplished paintings between the years 1941 1948 he consistently used intense stained fields of color often letting the paint run and drip under and around his familiar lexicon of organic and biomorphic shapes and delicate lines Another abstract expressionist whose works in the 1940s call to mind the stain paintings of the 1960s and the 1970s is James Brooks Brooks regularly used stain as a technique in his paintings from the late 1940s Brooks began diluting his oil paint in order to have fluid colors with which to pour and drip and stain into the mostly raw canvas that he used These works often combined calligraphy and abstract shapes During the final three decades of his career Sam Francis style of large scale bright abstract expressionism was closely associated with Color field painting His paintings straddled both camps within the abstract expressionist rubric Action painting and Color Field painting Having seen Pollock s 1951 paintings of thinned black oil paint stained into raw canvas Frankenthaler began to produce stain paintings in varied oil colors on raw canvas in 1952 Her most famous painting from that period is Mountains and Sea She is one of the originators of the Color Field movement that emerged in the late 1950s 50 Frankenthaler also studied with Hans Hofmann Hofmann s paintings are a symphony of color as seen in The Gate 1959 1960 He was renowned not only as an artist but also as a teacher of art both in his native Germany and later in the US Hofmann who came to the United States from Germany in the early 1930s brought with him the legacy of Modernism As a young artist in pre First World War Paris Hofmann worked with Robert Delaunay and he knew firsthand the innovative work of both Picasso and Matisse Matisse s work had an enormous influence on him and on his understanding of the expressive language of color and the potentiality of abstraction Hofmann was one of the first theorists of color field painting and his theories were influential to artists and to critics particularly to Clement Greenberg as well as to others during the 1930s and 1940s In 1953 Morris Louis and Kenneth Noland were both profoundly influenced by Helen Frankenthaler s stain paintings after visiting her studio in New York City Returning to Washington DC they began to produce the major works that created the color field movement in the late 1950s 51 In 1972 then Metropolitan Museum of Art curator Henry Geldzahler said Clement Greenberg included the work of both Morris Louis and Kenneth Noland in a show that he did at the Kootz Gallery in the early 1950s Clem was the first to see their potential He invited them up to New York in 1953 I think it was to Helen s studio to see a painting that she had just done called Mountains and Sea a very very beautiful painting which was in a sense out of Pollock and out of Gorky It also was one of the first stain pictures one of the first large field pictures in which the stain technique was used perhaps the first one Louis and Noland saw the picture unrolled on the floor of her studio and went back to Washington DC and worked together for a while working at the implications of this kind of painting 52 53 In the 1960s after abstract expressionism Edit Main articles Post painterly abstraction Color Field painting Lyrical Abstraction Arte Povera Process Art Minimal art Postminimalism and Western painting In abstract painting during the 1950s and 1960s several new directions like the Hard edge painting exemplified by John McLaughlin emerged Meanwhile as a reaction against the subjectivism of abstract expressionism other forms of Geometric abstraction began to appear in artist studios and in radical avant garde circles Greenberg became the voice of Post painterly abstraction by curating an influential exhibition of new painting that toured important art museums throughout the United States in 1964 Color field painting Hard edge painting and Lyrical Abstraction 54 emerged as radical new directions Abstract expressionism and the Cold War EditSince the mid 1970s it has been argued that the style attracted the attention in the early 1950s of the CIA who saw it as representative of the US as a haven of free thought and free markets as well as a challenge to both the socialist realist styles prevalent in communist nations and the dominance of the European art markets 55 The book by Frances Stonor Saunders citation needed The Cultural Cold War The CIA and the World of Arts and Letters 56 published in the UK as Who Paid the Piper CIA and the Cultural Cold War details how the CIA financed and organized the promotion of American abstract expressionists as part of cultural imperialism via the Congress for Cultural Freedom from 1950 to 1967 Notably Robert Motherwell s series Elegy to the Spanish Republic addressed some of those political issues Tom Braden founding chief of the CIA s International Organizations Division IOD and ex executive secretary of the Museum of Modern Art said in an interview I think it was the most important division that the agency had and I think that it played an enormous role in the Cold War 57 Against this revisionist tradition an essay by Michael Kimmelman chief art critic of The New York Times called Revisiting the Revisionists The Modern Its Critics and the Cold War asserts that much of that information concerning what was happening on the American art scene during the 1940s and 50s as well as the revisionists interpretation of it is false or decontextualized 58 Other books on the subject include Art in the Cold War by Christine Lindey which also describes the art of the Soviet Union at the same time and Pollock and After edited by Francis Frascina which reprinted the Kimmelman article Consequences Edit Jean Paul Riopelle 1951 Untitled oil on canvas 54 x 64 7 cm 21 1 4 x 25 1 2 in private collection Canadian painter Jean Paul Riopelle 1923 2002 a member of the Montreal based surrealist inspired group Les Automatistes helped introduce a related style of abstract impressionism to the Parisian art world from 1949 Michel Tapie s groundbreaking book Un Art Autre 1952 was also enormously influential in this regard Tapie was also a curator and exhibition organizer who promoted the works of Pollock and Hans Hofmann in Europe By the 1960s the movement s initial effect had been assimilated yet its methods and proponents remained highly influential in art affecting profoundly the work of many artists who followed Abstract expressionism preceded Tachisme Color Field painting Lyrical Abstraction Fluxus Pop Art Minimalism Postminimalism Neo expressionism and the other movements of the sixties and seventies and it influenced all those later movements that evolved Movements which were direct responses to and rebellions against abstract expressionism began with Hard edge painting Frank Stella Robert Indiana and others and Pop artists notably Andy Warhol Claes Oldenburg and Roy Lichtenstein who achieved prominence in the US accompanied by Richard Hamilton in Britain Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns in the US formed a bridge between abstract expressionism and Pop art Minimalism was exemplified by artists such as Donald Judd Robert Mangold and Agnes Martin However many painters such as Jules Olitski Joan Mitchell and Antoni Tapies continued to work in the abstract expressionist style for many years extending and expanding its visual and philosophical implications as many abstract artists continue to do today in styles described as Lyrical Abstraction Neo expressionist and others In the years after World War II a group of New York artists started one of the first true schools of artists in America bringing about a new era in American artwork abstract expressionism This led to the American art boom that brought about styles such as Pop Art This also helped to make New York into a cultural and artistic hub 59 Abstract Expressionists value the organism over the static whole becoming over being expression over perfection vitality over finish fluctuation over repose feeling over formulation the unknown over the known the veiled over the clear the individual over society and the inner over the outer 60 William C Seitz American artist and Art historianMajor sculpture Edit Richard Stankiewicz Detail of Figure 1956 steel iron and concrete in the collection of the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Alexander Calder Red Mobile 1956 Painted sheet metal and metal rods Montreal Museum of Fine Arts John Chamberlain S 1959 Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Washington DC Isamu Noguchi The Cry 1959 Kroller Muller Museum Sculpture Park Otterlo Netherlands Louise Bourgeois Maman 1999 outside Museo GuggenheimList of abstract expressionists EditAbstract expressionist artists Edit Significant artists whose mature work defined American abstract expressionism Albert Alcalay 1917 2008 Charles Alston 1907 1977 61 Ruth Asawa 1926 2013 62 Alice Baber 1928 1982 62 William Baziotes 1912 1963 63 James Bishop 1927 2021 Norman Bluhm 1921 1999 64 Louise Bourgeois 1911 2010 62 Ernest Briggs 1923 1984 62 James Brooks 1906 1992 62 David Budd 1927 1991 65 Fritz Bultman 1919 1985 62 Hans Burkhardt 1904 1994 66 Jack Bush 1909 1977 67 Charles Cajori 1921 2013 Lawrence Calcagno 1913 1993 68 Alexander Calder 1898 1976 69 Nicolas Carone 1917 2010 62 Giorgio Cavallon 1904 1989 62 John Chamberlain 1927 2011 70 Ed Clark 1926 2019 71 Joseph Cornell 1903 1972 62 Dorothy Dehner 1901 1994 62 Jean Dubuffet 1901 1985 72 Elaine de Kooning 1918 1989 73 Willem de Kooning 1904 1997 74 Beauford Delaney 1901 1979 75 Robert De Niro Sr 1922 1993 76 Richard Diebenkorn 1922 1993 77 Mark di Suvero born 1933 78 James Budd Dixon 1900 1967 79 Enrico Donati 1909 2008 62 Edward Dugmore 1915 1996 62 Friedel Dzubas 1915 1994 80 Jimmy Ernst 1920 1984 62 Herbert Ferber 1906 1991 81 John Ferren 1905 1970 82 Perle Fine 1905 1988 83 Sam Francis 1923 1994 84 Jane Frank 1918 1986 85 Helen Frankenthaler 1928 2011 62 Sonia Gechtoff 1926 2018 83 Michael Goldberg 1924 2007 62 Robert Goodnough 1917 2010 62 Arshile Gorky 1904 1948 86 Joseph Goto 1916 1994 Adolph Gottlieb 1903 1974 87 Morris Graves 1910 2001 88 Cleve Gray 1918 2004 89 Philip Guston 1913 1980 90 Raoul Hague 1904 1993 91 David Hare 1917 1992 92 Grace Hartigan 1922 2008 93 Hans Hofmann 1880 1966 94 Paul Horiuchi 1906 1999 John Hultberg 1922 2005 95 Paul Jenkins 1923 2012 96 Gerome Kamrowski 1914 2004 97 Matsumi Kanemitsu 1922 1992 Minoru Kawabata 1911 2001 James Kelly 1913 2003 Earl Kerkam 1891 1965 Franz Kline 1910 1962 63 Albert Kotin 1907 1980 62 Lee Krasner 1908 1984 63 Walter Kuhlman 1918 2009 98 Ibram Lassaw 1913 2003 99 Alfred Leslie born 1927 100 John Harrison Levee 1924 2017 Norman Lewis 1901 1979 101 Richard Lippold 1915 2002 102 Seymour Lipton 1903 1986 103 Frank Lobdell 1921 2013 104 Morris Louis 1912 1962 105 Conrad Marca Relli 1913 2000 106 Nicholas Marsicano 1908 1991 73 Mercedes Matter 1913 2001 107 Hugh Mesibov 1916 2016 108 Fred Mitchell 1923 2013 109 Joan Mitchell 1925 1992 110 Robert Motherwell 1915 1991 111 Louise Nevelson 1899 1988 112 Barnett Newman 1905 1970 113 Isamu Noguchi 1904 1988 114 Kenzo Okada 1902 1982 115 John Opper 1908 1994 116 Charlotte Park 1910 2010 117 Ray Parker 1922 1990 118 Phillip Pavia 1912 2005 119 Jackson Pollock 1912 1956 63 Fuller Potter 1910 1990 Richard Pousette Dart 1916 1992 63 Ad Reinhardt 1913 1967 120 Milton Resnick 1917 2004 121 Robert Richenburg 1917 2006 George Rickey 1904 2002 122 Jean Paul Riopelle 1923 2002 123 William Ronald 1926 1998 124 James Rosati 1911 1988 Ralph Rosenborg 1913 1992 125 Theodore Roszak 1907 1981 126 Mark Rothko 1903 1970 63 Anne Ryan 1889 1954 127 Louis Schanker 1903 1981 Jon Schueler 1916 1992 Charles Seliger 1926 2009 128 Harold Shapinsky 1925 2004 Thomas Sills 1914 2000 Janet Sobel 1893 1968 David Smith 1906 1965 129 Theodoros Stamos 1922 1997 130 Richard Stankiewicz 1922 1983 131 Joe Stefanelli 1921 2017 132 Hedda Sterne 1910 2011 133 Clyfford Still 1904 1980 134 George Stillman 1921 1997 135 Reuben Tam 1916 1991 Alma Thomas 1891 1978 136 Mark Tobey 1890 1976 137 Bradley Walker Tomlin 1899 1953 138 Cy Twombly 1928 2011 139 Jack Tworkov 1900 1982 140 Esteban Vicente 1903 2001 141 Peter Voulkos 1924 2002 142 Corinne Michelle West 1908 1991 143 John von Wicht 1888 1970 144 Hale Woodruff 1900 1980 145 Emerson Woelffer 1914 2003 146 Taro Yamamoto 1919 1994 147 Manouchehr Yektai 1922 2019 148 Other artists Edit Significant artists whose mature work relates to the American abstract expressionist movement Satoru Abe born 1926 Bumpei Akaji 1921 2002 Olga Albizu 1924 2005 Karel Appel 1921 2006 Mino Argento born 1927 149 Rosemarie Beck 1923 2003 William Brice 1921 2008 Alexander Bogen 1916 2010 Charles Ragland Bunnell 1897 1968 Gretna Campbell 1922 1987 Mary Callery 1903 1977 Chu Teh Chun 1920 2014 Edward Clark 1926 2019 Alfred L Copley 1910 1992 aka L Alcopley Edward Corbett 1919 1971 Jean Michel Coulon 1920 2014 Sari Dienes 1898 1992 Jacques Demoulin 1905 1991 Isami Doi 1903 1965 Lynne Mapp Drexler 1928 1999 Jean Dubuffet 1901 1985 Lucio Fontana 1899 1968 Alice Garver 1924 1966 Herbert Gentry 1919 2003 150 Sam Gilliam 1933 2022 Joseph Glasco 1925 1996 John D Graham 1881 1961 Stephen Greene 1918 1999 Elaine Hamilton 1920 2010 Hans Hartung 1904 1989 Saburo Hasegawa 1906 1957 Al Held 1928 2005 Raymond Hendler 1923 1998 Gino Hollander 1924 2015 John Hoyland 1934 2011 Ralph Iwamoto 1927 2013 William Ivey 1919 1992 Jasper Johns born 1930 Karl Kasten 1916 2010 Keichi Kimura 1914 1988 Sueko Kimura 1912 2001 Hilma af Klint 1862 1944 Frances Kornbluth 1920 2014 Andre Lanskoy 1902 1976 John Levee 1924 2017 Michael Loew 1907 1985 Agnes Martin 1912 2004 Knox Martin 1923 2022 Georges Mathieu 1921 2012 Herbert Matter 1907 1984 Emiko Nakano 1925 1990 George McNeil 1908 1995 Jean Messagier 1920 1999 Jay Meuser 1911 1963 George Miyasaki 1935 2013 Seong Moy 1921 2013 Jan Muller 1922 1958 Robert Natkin 1930 2010 Tetsuo Ochikubo 1923 1975 Frank Okada 1931 2000 Jerry Okimoto 1924 1998 Jules Olitski 1922 2007 Pat Passlof 1928 2011 Irene Rice Pereira 1902 1971 Earle M Pilgrim 1923 1976 Robert Rauschenberg 1925 2008 Larry Rivers 1923 2002 Julio Rosado del Valle 1922 2008 Jack Roth 1927 2004 Tadashi Sato 1923 2005 Jon Schueler 1916 1992 Pablo Serrano 1908 1985 Sarai Sherman 1922 2013 Morita Shiryu 1912 1999 Vieira da Silva 1907 1992 Aaron Siskind 1903 1991 Tony Smith 1912 1980 Syd Solomon 1917 2004 Pierre Soulages 1919 2022 Nicolas de Stael 1914 1955 Frank Stella born 1936 Ary Stillman 1891 1967 Kumi Sugai 1919 1996 Stuart Sutcliffe 1940 1962 Augustus Vincent Tack 1870 1949 Toshiko Takaezu 1922 2011 Antoni Tapies 1923 2012 Harry Tsuchidana born 1932 Tony Tuckson 1921 1973 Nina Tryggvadottir 1913 1968 Bram van Velde 1895 1981 Don Van Vliet 1941 2010 Cora Kelley Ward 1920 1989 Ulfert Wilke 1907 1987 Wols 1913 1951 Tseng Yu ho 1924 2017 Zao Wou Ki 1920 2013 See also Edit Visual Arts portal Philosophy portal Arts portalRelated styles trends schools and movements Edit Abstract art Abstract Imagists Action painting American Abstract Artists Arte Povera Asemic writing Avant garde CoBrA Color field painting History of painting Informalism Les Automatistes Les Plasticiens Lyrical Abstraction Lyricism Minimalism New European Painting New York School Organic Surrealism 9th Street Art Exhibition Painters Eleven Pop art Post painterly abstraction Tachisme Tenth Street galleries The Irascibles Western Painting Other related topics Edit Bluebeard by Kurt Vonnegut is a fictional autobiography written by fictional abstract expressionist Rabo Karabekian Ismail Gulgee artist whose work reflects abstract expressionist influence in South Asia during the Cold War especially action painting Michel Tapie critic and exhibition organizer important to the dissemination of abstract expressionism in Europe Japan and Latin America References Edit Editors of Phaidon Press 2001 The 20th Century art book Reprinted ed London Phaidon Press ISBN 0714835420 Hess Barbara Abstract Expressionism 2005 Andreas Neufert Auf Liebe und Tod Das Leben des Surrealisten Wolfgang Paalen Berlin Parthas 2015 S 494ff Barnett Newman Foundation archive 18 103 Shapiro David Cecile 2000 Abstract Expressionism The politics of apolitical painting pp 189 190 In Frascina Francis 2000 1 Pollock and After The Critical Debate 2nd ed London Routledge Catherine de Zegher and Hendel Teicher eds 3 X Abstraction NY The Drawing Center and New Haven Yale University Press 2005 Serge Guilbaut How New York Stole the Idea of Modern Art University of Chicago Press 1983 Marika Herskovic Americancan Abstract Expressionism of the 1950s An Illustrated Survey New York School Press 2003 ISBN 0 9677994 1 4 pp12 13 a b Marika Herskovic New York School Abstract Expressionists Artists Choice by Artists New York School Press 2000 ISBN 0 9677994 0 6 p 11 12 Abstract Expressionism by Barbara Hess Taschen 2005 back cover Thomas B Hess Willem de Kooning George Braziller Inc New York 1959 p 13 Tomkins Calvin Off the Wall A Portrait of Robert Rauschenberg Deckle Edge Paperback p 5 Publisher Picador Revised and Updated edition November 29 2005 ISBN 0 312 42585 6 Barnett Newman Selected Writings and Interviews ed by John P O Neill pp 240 241 University of California Press 1990 Barnett Newman Selected Writings Interviews p 201 Clement Greenberg Art and Culture Critical essays The Crisis of the Easel Picture Beacon Press 1961 pp 154 57 Harold Rosenberg The Tradition of the New Chapter 2 The American Action Painter pp 23 39 Jean Dubuffet L Art brut prefere aux arts culturels 1949 engl in Art brut Madness and Marginalia special issue of Art amp Text No 27 1987 p 31 33 Museum Solomon R Guggenheim December 23 1953 Younger European painters a selection Exhibition December 2 1953 to February 21 1954 OL 22161138M via The Open Library Willem de Kooning 1969 by Thomas B Hess a b c Dorment Richard Arshile Gorky A Retrospective at Tate Modern review The Daily Telegraph February 8 2010 Retrieved May 24 2010 Art Daily Archived December 27 2011 at the Wayback Machine retrieved May 24 2010 L A Art Collector Caps Two Year Pursuit of Artist with Exhibition of New Work ArtDaily Retrieved May 26 2010 Lyrical Abstraction has been applied at times to the work of Arshile Gorky Arshile Gorky A Retrospective Tate February 9 2010 Retrieved June 5 2010 Van Siclen Bill Art scene by Bill Van Siclen Part time faculty with full time talent Archived June 22 2011 at the Wayback Machine The Providence Journal July 10 2003 Retrieved June 10 2010 Chaet Bernard 1980 The Boston Expressionist School A Painter s Recollections of the Forties Archives of American Art Journal The Smithsonian Institution 20 1 28 doi 10 1086 aaa 20 1 1557495 JSTOR 1557495 S2CID 192821072 Thomas Hess s favorite painter Willem de Kooning made it very clear to me in a conversation in 1954 that he and Jackson Pollock considered Bloom whom they had discovered in Americans 1942 the first Abstract Expressionist artist in America Hans Hofmann org 1940 1949 Appignanesi Richard et al Introducing Postmodernism Ikon Books Cambridge United Kingdom 2003 p 30 Nochlin Linda Ch 1 in Women Artists at the Millennium edited by C Armstrong and C de Zegher MIT Press 2006 Pollock Griselda Encounters in the Virtual Feminist Museum Time Space and the Archive Routledge 2007 De Zegher Catherine and Teicher Hendel eds 3 X Abstraction New Haven Yale University Press 2005 McNeil George 2008 George McNeil Janis Gallery abstract New York Magazine January 31 1972 Retrieved 2016 03 20 Summers Claude J 2004 The Queer Encyclopedia of the Visual Arts ISBN 9781573441919 Scott William B Rutkoff Peter M August 24 2001 New York Modern ISBN 9780801867934 Rosenberg Harold The American Action Painters poetrymagazines org uk Retrieved August 20 2006 based very loosely on a lecture by Fred Orton at the Uni of Leeds and H Geldzahler New York Painting and Sculpture 1940 1970 NY 1969 International Paintings and Sculpture Woman V nga gov au Retrieved 2016 03 20 Painting Number 2 at MoMA Keane Tim March 16 2013 Painting at the Speed of Sight Franz Kline s Rapid Transit Hyperallergic Art History Definition Action Painting ThoughtCo Retrieved 2018 05 04 Franz Kline Number 2 1954 Museum of Modern Art New York Rudolf Arnheim The Power of the Center A Study of Composition in the Visual Arts University of California Press 1983 pp 71 72 ISBN 0520050150 Willette Jeanne Abstract Expressionism Redefining Art Part One Art History Unstuffed Metropolitan Museum of Art Heilbrunn Timeline of Art History Abstract Expressionism Metropolitan Museum of Art Robert Motherwell Elegy to the Spanish Republic 108 1965 67 MoMA The Museum of Modern Art The Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art Lyrical Abstraction exhibition April 5 through June 7 1970 Statement of the exhibition MoMA Learning What is Abstract Expressionism Mark Rothko Retrieved February 28 2014 Pollock 12 1952 at NY State Mall project Archived March 13 2014 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved May 6 2011 Color Field Artists Found a Different Way Retrieved August 3 2010 Fenton Terry Morris Louis sharecom ca Retrieved December 8 2008 De Antonio Emile 1984 Painters Painting a Candid History of The Modern Art Scene 1940 1970 Abbeville Press p 79 ISBN 0 89659 418 1 Carmean E A 1989 Helen Frankenthaler A Paintings Retrospective Exhibition Catalog in conjunction with The Museum of Modern Art Fort Worth Harry N Abrams pp 12 20 ISBN 0 8109 1179 5 Aldrich Larry Young Lyrical Painters Art in America v 57 n6 November December 1969 pp 104 113 CIA and AbEx Retrieved November 7 2010 Worldcatlibraries org Worldcatlibraries org OCLC 43114251 Retrieved April 25 2012 Modern Art was a CIA Weapon Retrieved September 4 2013 Kimmelman Michael Frascina Francis ed 2000 Revisiting the Revisionists The Modern Its Critics and the Cold War Pollock and After The Critical Debate Psychology Press pp 294 306 ISBN 9780415228664 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a first2 has generic name help Abstract Expressionist New York MoMA Retrieved March 22 2012 Dore Ashton American Art Since 1945 Oxford University Press 1982 p 37 ISBN 0195203593 Charles Henry Alston Biography www askart com a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Marika Herskovic New York School Abstract Expressionists Artists Choice by Artists New York School Press 2000 ISBN 0 9677994 0 6 a b c d e f Metropolitan Museum of Art Heilbrunn Timeline of History Cotter Holland February 6 1999 Norman Bluhm Is Dead at 78 Abstract Expressionist Painter Published 1999 The New York Times EXHIBIT PREVIEW Rediscovering David Budd The Forgotten Abstract Expressionist ticket heraldtribune com Hans Burkhardt 89 An Abstract Painter Published 1994 The New York Times Associated Press April 24 1994 Jack Bush Online www artcyclopedia com Lawrence Calcagno Online www artcyclopedia com Alexander Calder Artist ArtFacts Kennedy Randy December 22 2011 John Chamberlain Who Wrested Rough Magic From Scrap Metal Dies at 84 Published 2011 The New York Times Smith Roberta Vigdor Neil 2019 10 21 Ed Clark Pioneering Abstract Painter Dies at 93 The New York Times Jean Dubuffet The Last Two Years by Donald Kuspit artnet Magazine www artnet com a b New York Cool Painting and Sculpture from the NYU Art Collection Grey Art Gallery 2 December 2015 Carol Vogel Works by Johns and de Kooning Sell for 143 5 Million The New York Times October 12 2006 Artdaily Robert de sic Niro Sr Online www artcyclopedia com Kimmelman Michael March 31 1993 Richard Diebenkorn Lyrical Painter Dies at 71 Published 1993 The New York Times Aurora www nga gov James Budd Dixon Widewalls www widewalls ch New York School Abstract Expressionists Artists Choice by Artists New York School Press 2000 ISBN 0 9677994 0 6 pp 20 21 Herbert Ferber Online www artcyclopedia com John Ferren Online www artcyclopedia com a b Brooks Katherine June 28 2016 12 Women Of Abstract Expressionism History Should Not Forget HuffPost Wood Jim October 2007 Sam Francis The internationally acclaimed abstract expressionist spent his last days in West Marin Marin Magazine Archived from the original on June 12 2008 Artist Showdown Jane Frank Feaver William The mysterious art of Arshile Gorky The Guardian February 6 2010 Retrieved June 10 2010 Adolph Gottlieb artnet www artnet com Morris Graves Online www artcyclopedia com Cleve Gray Online www artcyclopedia com Philip Guston 1913 1980 Tate Smith Roberta February 18 1993 Raoul Hague Sculptor 88 Dies Abstract Expressionist in Wood Published 1993 The New York Times David Hare Sculptor Painter Los Angeles Times December 28 1992 Grimes William 2008 11 18 Grace Hartigan 86 Abstract Painter Dies The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2018 02 17 THE ARTIST HANS HOFMANN UB Anderson Gallery to Present John Hultberg Vanishing Point www buffalo edu Kennedy Randy June 17 2012 Paul Jenkins Painter of Abstract Artwork Dies at 88 Published 2012 The New York Times Forest Forms 1943 The Met Baker Kenneth March 30 2009 Walter Kuhlman dies abstract expressionist SFGATE Ibram Lassaw Online www artcyclopedia com Sobieski Elizabeth April 3 2014 Alfred Leslie The Last of the Really Great Abstract Expressionists Now a Master of 21st Century Digital Art HuffPost Norman Lewis American Art americanart si edu Retrieved 2015 06 04 ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM HUMANOID SCULPTURE FROM THE 3RD DIMENSION Los Angeles Times January 13 1985 James George December 7 1986 SEYMOUR LIPTON DIES A SELF TAUGHT SCULPTOR Published 1986 The New York Times Jesse Hamlin Frank Lobdell influential Bay Area painter dies SF Gate Thursday 19 December 2013 retvd 29 July 2014 Morris Louis Kimmelman Michael August 31 2000 Conrad Marca Relli Collagist and Painter Is Dead at 87 Published 2000 The New York Times Roosevelt Institute Hugh Mesibov Biography hughmesibov com Herskovic Marika New York school abstract expressionists artists choice by artists a complete documentation of the New York painting and sculpture annuals 1951 1957 New Jersey New York School Press 2000 p 253 Brenson Michael November 3 1989 Review Art An Art of Motion Joan Mitchell s Abstract Expressionism The New York Times Retrieved November 23 2012 Glueck Grace July 18 1991 Robert Motherwell Master of Abstract Dies Published 1991 The New York Times Read the Latest from the Broad Strokes Blog Temkin Ann March 1 2002 A Giant Zip for Mankind ArtAsiaPacific Abstract Expressionism Looking East From The Far West artasiapacific com The Phillips Collection John Opper 85 Abstract Painter Published 1994 The New York Times October 7 1994 Helen Harrison 2002 12 08 Arts amp Entertainment Art Reviews Landscapes of Fantasy and a Devotion to Color Three East End Artists The New York Times New York New York p LI21 This body of her work has not been seen in depth for many years and it confirms her status as a New York School abstractionist of the first rank Seldom does a painter have such control over intense color for example ion No 6 Montauk in which the sharpness of complementary contrasts is subtly muted and harmonized Complex interactive layering animates the painted surfaces which often conceal as much as they reveal Organic and calligraphic shapes jockey for position yet are held firmly in place by implicit structure These are not mere virtuoso formal exercises however their emotional undercurrents are as strong as their technical qualities Untitled Norton Simon Museum www nortonsimon org You are being redirected ctstatelibrary org Ad Reinhardt Smithsonian American Art Museum americanart si edu Smith Roberta March 19 2004 Milton Resnick Abstract Expressionist Painter Dies at 87 Published 2004 The New York Times Johnson Ken July 21 2002 George Rickey Sculptor Whose Works Moved Dies at 95 Published 2002 The New York Times Jean Paul Riopelle 78 Canadian Abstract Expressionist Painter Los Angeles Times March 16 2002 Britannica Zenobia Grant Wingate Ralph Rosenborg Caldwell Gallery Retrieved 2019 06 18 Dudar Helen Picturing the American Century Smithsonian Magazine Anne Ryan The New Yorker Grimes William October 9 2009 Charles Seliger Abstract Expressionist Dies at 83 Published 2009 The New York Times David Smith Widewalls www widewalls ch The Phillips Collection Archived from the original on May 7 2015 Retrieved July 12 2018 Richard Stankiewicz Online www artcyclopedia com Joe Stefanelli InLiquid October 28 1989 Art Daily Hedda Sterne America s Last Original Abstract Expressionist and Sole Woman in the Group Dies Retrieved April 10 2011 Clyfford Still The Phillips Collection Archived from the original on January 22 2010 Retrieved 21 October 2014 Sausalito historical society Alma Thomas an abstract expressionist and black artist who fiercely resisted any labels America Magazine September 22 2016 Mark Tobey Biography Infos for Sellers and Buyers www mark tobey com Phillips Collection Archived from the original on December 13 2017 Retrieved July 7 2018 Matt Schudel July 6 2011 Cy Twombly influential Va born abstract artist dies at 83 Washington Post Jack Tworkov artnet www artnet com SMITH ROBERTA 2001 01 12 Esteban Vicente Dies at 97 An Abstract Expressionist The New York Times Retrieved May 1 2010 Untitled Stack by Peter Voulkos February 1 2012 De Young Museum deyoung famsf org Retrieved 2017 01 02 A woman painting in a man s world Orange County Register 9 June 2010 Retrieved 2 November 2014 John von Wicht Painter Dead His Works in Leading Museums Published 1970 The New York Times January 23 1970 Hale Woodruff Smithsonian American Art Museum americanart si edu Emerson Woelffer artnet www artnet com Marika Herskovic New York School Abstract Expressionists Artists Choice by Artists New York School Press 2000 ISBN 0 9677994 0 6 p 33 p 39 p 378 381 A Family of Artists Yektai Father and Sons Share Gallery Space at Guild Hall Hamptons Art HubHamptons Art Hub hamptonsarthub com December 8 2017 Mino Argento Betty Parsons Gallery Arts magazine Volume 52 Part 1 Page 13 Pattan S F 1998 African American Art New York Oxford University PressBooks EditBelgrad Daniel The Culture of Spontaneity Improvisation and the Arts in Postwar America University of Chicago Press Chicago amp London 1998 ISBN 978 966 359 305 0 Anfam David Abstract Expressionism New York amp London Thames amp Hudson 1990 ISBN 0 500 20243 5 Craven David Abstract expressionism as cultural critique dissent during the McCarthy period Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press 1999 ISBN 0 521 43415 7 Marika Herskovic American Abstract and Figurative Expressionism Style Is Timely Art Is Timeless New York School Press 2009 ISBN 978 0 9677994 2 1 Marika Herskovic American Abstract Expressionism of the 1950s An Illustrated Survey New York School Press 2003 ISBN 0 9677994 1 4 Marika Herskovic New York School Abstract Expressionists Artists Choice by Artists New York School Press 2000 ISBN 0 9677994 0 6 Papanikolas Theresa and Stephen Salel Stephen Abstract Expressionism Looking East from the Far West Honolulu Museum of Art 2017 ISBN 9780937426920 Serge Guilbaut How New York Stole the Idea of Modern Art University of Chicago Press 1983 Bibliography EditAnfam David Abstract Expressionism A World Elsewhere New York Haunch of Venison 2008 Haunchofvenison com Greenberg Clement American Type Painting In Art and Culture Critical Essays Boston Beacon Press 1961 208 29 Jachec Nancy The Philosophy and Politics of Abstract Expressionism 1940 1960 Cambridge University Press Cambridge 2000 ISBN 0 521 65154 9 O Connor Francis V Jackson Pollock exhibition catalogue New York Museum of Modern Art 1967 OCLC 165852 Saunders Frances Stonor The cultural cold war the CIA and the world of arts and letters New York New Press Distributed by W W Norton amp Co 2000 ISBN 1 56584 596 X Tapie Michel Hans Hofmann peintures 1962 23 avril 18 mai 1963 Paris Galerie Anderson Mayer 1963 exhibition catalogue and commentary OCLC 62515192 Tapie Michel Pollock Paris P Facchetti 1952 OCLC 30601793 Wechsler Jeffrey 2007 Pathways and Parallels Roads to Abstract Expressionism New York Hollis Taggart Galleries ISBN 978 0 9759954 9 5 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Abstract expressionism Wikiquote has quotations related to Abstract expressionism Jackson Pollock Louis Schanker Philip Guston Perle Fine Perle Fine Abstract Expressionism 1950s New York action painter on YouTube Albert Kotin Albert Kotin Abstract Expressionism 1950s New York School 1950s action painting on YouTube James Brooks Abstract Expressionist painter 1906 1992 James Brooks Abstract Expressionism New York School 1950s action painting on YouTube American Abstract Artists Beginning of the New York School 1950s Abstract Expressionism of the 1950s on YouTube Clyfford Still Museum Abstract expressionism 1950s New York School Artists of the 9th St Show Reminisce on YouTube 9th Street Art Exhibition abstract expressionist artists reminisce on YouTube Nicolas Carone Abstract Expressionism Artist of the 9th St Show on YouTube Conrad Marca Relli Abstract Expressionism 1950s New York School collage painter on YouTube Robert Richenburg Abstract Expressionism 1950s New York School 1950s on YouTube Joe Stefanelli Abstract Expressionism 1950s New York School 1950s on YouTube What is Abstract Expressionism on YouTube Retrieved from https en 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