ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Abstract Expressionism The first truly American
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Abstract Expressionism The first truly American visual art form that helped put New York as a cultural capital (perhaps even above Paris). Drawing from Surrealism, they developed the NEW YORK SCHOOL, which comprised action painting, Jazz, abstract expressionism and improvisional theatre. This period of art was special because it was the first to recognize art with NO identifiable subject matter! Jackson Pollock, No. 5, 1948.
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Two Categories for Abstract Expressionism: Action Painting Color-Field Painting
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Jackson Pollock Affected by surrealism and also by Picasso, he moved toward a highly abstract art in order to express, rather than illustrate, feeling. His experimentations led to the development of his famous "drip" technique, in which he energetically drew or "dripped" complicated linear rhythms onto big canvases, which were often placed flat on the floor.
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM He sometimes applied paint directly from the tube, and at times also used aluminum paint to achieve a glittery effect. His vigorous attack on the canvas and intense devotion to the very act of painting led to the term "action painting. " Jackson Pollock
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM On the floor I am more at ease, I feel nearer, more a part of the painting, since this way I can walk around in it, work from the four sides and be literally `in' the painting. Jackson Pollock, 1947. Died in a drunk driving accident in 1956 Jackson Pollock
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Jackson Pollock, Blue Poles: Number 11, 1952.
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Jackson Pollock, Lavender Mist: Number 1, 1950.
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Jackson Pollock, Autumn Rhythm: Number 30, 1950.
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Willem de Kooning (1904 -1997) Dutch-born American Action painter Attempted to combine the expressiveness of Abstract Expressionism with recognizable objects
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Willem de Kooning, Asheville, 1948.
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Willem de Kooning, Woman V, 1952 -53. Willem de Kooning
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Willem de Kooning, Woman I, 1952. Willem de Kooning
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Mark Rothko (1903 -1997) Emigrated to the United States from Russia in 1913 Part of the New York School Used bands of color as the only true means of capturing feeling Mark Rothko
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Rothko paintings on display Mark Rothko
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Mark Rothko, No. 10, 1950. By 1950 Rothko had reduced the number of floating rectangles to two, three, or four and aligned them vertically against a colored ground, arriving at his signature style.
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Mark Rothko From that time on he would work almost invariably within this format, suggesting in numerous variations of color and tone an astonishing range of atmospheres and moods. Mark Rothko, White Center, 1950.
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Mark Rothko In 1954 he asked that his largest pictures be installed "so that they must be first encountered at close quarters, so that the first experience is to be within the picture. "
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Rothko after completing his painting, Black Square. Mark Rothko
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Helen Frankenthaler (1928 -) Frankenthaler was a “Post-Painterly” Abstract Expressionist whose transparent, bare brushstrokes were influenced by Pollock
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Helen Frankenthaler Post-painterly Abstraction was a new movement in painting which derived from the Abstract Expressionism of the 1940 s and 1950 s but "favored openness or clarity" as opposed to the dense painterly surfaces of that painting style. Helen Frankenthaler, Other Generations, 1957. ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM The first Jackson Pollock show Frankenthaler saw was in 1951. She had this to say about seeing Pollock's paintings Autumn Rhythm, Number 30, 1950 (1950), Number One (1950), and Lavender Mist: "It was all there. I wanted to live in this land. I had to live there, and master the language. " Helen Frankenthaler Seeing the Moon on a Hot Summer Day 1987 ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Helen Frankenthaler
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM Helen Frankenthaler, Mountains and Sea, 1952. ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM
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