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Dive into the world of Abstract Expressionism and Minimal Art, exploring key artists like Pollock, Rothko, De Kooning, Kelly, and Stella. Discover the distinctive styles, techniques, and philosophies that shaped these avant-garde movements.
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SOME TERMS FOR TODAY’S CLASS • Action Painting (pertains to Pollock and De Kooning) • Allover or Overall Abstraction (pertains to Pollock) • Gestural painting (pertains to Pollock and especially De Kooning) • Color Field painting (pertains to Rothko) • Hard Edge painting (pertains to Kelly and Stella)
1942 Group Photo of European Expatriate Artists in New York Front : Matta, Zadkine, Tanguy, Ernst, Chagall, and Léger Back : Breton, Mondrian, Masson, Ozenfant, Lipchitz, Tchelitchev, Seligmann, and Berman
Pollock, 1950 Relationship between Abstract Expressionism and early 20th- century abstract painting Kandinsky, 1913
Pollock, 1950 Relationship between Abstract Expressionism and Surrealism Masson, 1926
Size matters . . . Woman standing in front of Pollock’s Autumn Rhythm in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Autumn Rhythm Action Painting: Term coined by the critic Harold Rosenberg, who thought of the canvas as an arena in which violent and heroic actions were performed by artistic warriors Photograph of Pollock at work
Autumn Rhythm and details
Allover or Overall Abstraction A term applied to the works of Pollock, in which there are no distinct shapes. Rather, his open, interpenetrating lines form an “overall” field in which every area of the canvas is of equal value, and no single object stands out from the total “mass image.”
Pollock: “I am nature.” Pollock: “I try to stay away from any recognizable image; if it creeps in, I try to do away with it. . . . My concern is with the rhythms of nature”—that is, with capturing the underlying dynamism of nature, like “the way the ocean moves.”
Note the textbook’s suggestive analogy: “From its position on a wall the work looms above us like a wave about to crash.”
Willem De Kooning, Composition, 1955 Pollock, detail of Autumn Rhythm
Detail of a similar painting by De Kooning—note the “gestural” brushstrokes De Kooning, Composition
Two paintings by De Kooning Composition, 1955 Woman I, 1950-52
Matisse, Woman with a Hat, 1905 De Kooning, Woman I, 1950-52
So-called Venus of Willendorf, a prehistoric fertility object Woman I
1950s ads for Camel cigarettes Woman I
Jayne Mansfield, 1956 Woman I
De Kooning’s woman reflects the age-old cultural ambivalence between reverence for and fear of the power of the feminine. Woman I
Two “Color Field” paintings by Rothko No. 61 (Rust and Blue), 1953 Orange and Yellow, 1956
Hard Edge painting (Minimal Art) Color Field painting (Abstract Expressionism) vs. Ellsworth Kelly, Red Blue Green, 1963 Rothko, 1957
ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM vs. MINIMAL ART Kelly, Red Blue Green, 1963 De Kooning, 1955 Here the contrasts between Abstract Expressionism and Minimal Art—between gestural painting and Hard Edge painting—are more obvious.
Detail of De Kooning Detail of Kelly
Mondrian, Composition with Red, Blue, and Yellow, 1930 Kelly, Red Blue Green, 1963 Relationship between Minimal Art and early 20th-century abstract painting— not to Kandinsky but to Mondrian
Frank Stella, Empress of India (from Stella’s “Notched-V” series), 1965 Prof. Z. and Empress of India
Stella “A sword in the heart of Abstract Expressionism” Frank Stella, Empress of India Pollock
Frank Stella, Empress of India Stella: “My paintings are based on the fact that only what can be seen there is there. . . . What you see is what you see.”
Empress of India Detail
Empress of India The art critic Michael Fried noted a new feature of Stella’s “shaped canvases”: “The overall shape,” he observed, “echoes the internal form.” Thus, Stella closed the gap between what Fried called the “literal shape” of the painting and its “depicted shape,” thereby achieving a new unity.
MINIMALIST SCULPTURE David Smith, 3 sculptures from the Cubi series Smith’s Cubi series consists of 28 stainless steel sculptures made between 1961 and 1965. Another piece from the Cubi series
Detail A new type of sculpture: not carved (like wood or stone), modeled (like clay), or cast (like bronze), but “assembled” from pieces of sheet metal welded together Sculpture from Cubi series
Donald Judd, Untitled, 1968 (Far more “minimalist” than Smith’s work) Sculpture from Cubi series
Donald Judd,Untitled, 1968 Frank Stella, Empress of India, 1965
Untitled, 1968 Donald Judd Note: Works like the one on the right are known as “stacks.” Untitled, 1969
Judd’s “stacks” are always composed of single units – usually ten of them – with identical dimensions, placed one above another on the wall. The intervening spaces have the same dimensions. Therefore, solids and voids are identical, and there is a unity somewhat similar to that of Stella’s shaped canvases. In addition, the distance between the floor and the lowermost unit is the same and, ideally, so is the distance between the topmost unit and the ceiling (though this is not always possible). Untitled, 1969
A good example of a Judd “stack” not far from where I live: in the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Texas
MZ and a similar “stack” by Judd