Showing posts with label Abstract Expressionist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abstract Expressionist. Show all posts

Thursday, February 20, 2014

Jackson Pollock / Works

1942 Male and Female

WORKS
By Jackson Pollock


1942 Stenographic Figure


My painting does not come from the easel. I prefer to tack the unstretched canvas to the hard wall or the floor. I need the resistance of a hard surface. On the floor I am more at ease. I feel nearer, more part of the painting, since this way I can walk around it, work from the four sides and literally be in the painting.

I continue to get further away from the usual painter's tools such as easel, palette, brushes, etc. I prefer sticks, trowels, knives and dripping fluid paint or a heavy impasto with sand, broken glass or other foreign matter added.

Jackson Pollock



1942 The Moon-Woman


1943 Blue (Moby Dick)


1943 Guardians of the Secret


1943 Pasiphäe


1943 The Key


1946 Shimmering Substance

When I am in my painting, I'm not aware of what I'm doing. It is only after a sort of 'get acquainted' period that I see what I have been about. I have no fear of making changes, destroying the image, etc., because the painting has a life of its own. I try to let it come through. It is only when I lose contact with the painting that the result is a mess. Otherwise there is pure harmony, an easy give and take, and the painting comes out well.

Jackson Pollock


1947 Cathedral


1947 Full Fathom Five


1947 Galaxy


1948 Number 1A


Number 1A detail


1950 Autumn Rhythm


Autumn rhythm detail


1950 Lavender Mist


1952 Blue Poles


1952 Convergence


Convergence detail


1953 The Deep



Connoisseur, 1962
Norman Rockwell

Jackson Pollock / A compliment

Number 26 A, 1948
Jackson Pollock
A COMPLIMENT

by Jackson Pollock



Abstract painting is abstract. It confronts you. There was a reviewer a while back who wrote that my pictures didn't have any beginning or any end. He didn't mean it as a compliment, but it was.



Jackson Pollock / Quotes

Comet, 1947
Jackson Pollock


QUOTES
Jackson Pollock


1

Every good painter paints what he is.



2

I have no fear of making changes, destroying the image, etc., because the painting has a life of its own.


3

When I am in my painting, I'm not aware of what I'm doing.



4

It is only when I lose contact with the painting that the result is a mess. Otherwise there is pure harmony, an easy give and take, and the painting comes out well.

5
New needs need new techniques. And the modern artists have found new ways and new means of making their statements... the modern painter cannot express this age, the airplane, the atom bomb, the radio, in the old forms of the Renaissance or of any other past culture.

6
I don't work from drawings. I don't make sketches and drawings and color sketches into a final painting.

7
My paintings do not have a center, but depend on the same amount of interest throughout.

8
When I'm painting, I'm not aware of what I'm doing. It's only after a get acquainted period that I see what I've been about. I've no fears about making changes for the painting has a life of its own.

9
The modern artist is working with space and time, and expressing his feelings rather than illustrating.

10


Jackson Pollock / Jack the Dripper Returns


Jack the Dripper Returns 

By the time Jackson Pollock came along almost all the basic ways of putting paint on a picture had been discovered. The 19th century impressionists had pracfically exhausted stippling. Brushy expressionism had been pre-empted by some Germans just before World War 1. Kasimir Malevich trotted out a blank-looking, white-on-white canvas in Russia in 1918. The territory of neat, flat colored reetangles was claimed by Mondrian in the 1920s. And since the early '30s, Salvador Dali had enjoyed a virtual lock on smoothly detailed surrealism. Nevertheless, Pollok found an empty slot and set up shop: he dripped — or poured or splattered—his paint. True, a few artists had occasionally produced drip paintings before Pollock did. But Pollock was the first to make dripping his entire, ongoing method. His signature style became instantly recognizable (Life magazine famously asked in 1949, ,,Is he the greatest living painter in the United States?“), and Pollock spent the years 1947 to 1951 devoted to it.


Pollock, without doubt, was a man of stunninginnovation. But 5Oyears on, a question remains: is there enough visual pleasure in his best work to convince us that he was also a genuinely great artist who belongs in the same pantheon as, say, Rubens and Manet? Pollock painted at least a half-dozen large-scale masterpieces—“Number 32,“ ,,Lavender Mist“ and ,,Autumn Rhythm“ (all from 1950) among them—that you can admire whith your eye and heart as well as your brain. They're memorable compositions and profoundly gorgeous paintings The late dripper ,,Blue Poles“ (1952), on loan from Australia, is a knock - out. These pictures are what make Pollock‘s big   retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York (through Feb. 2) the most important show of the year. We confess we actually liked the Mark Rothko exhibition (which opened at the National Gallery in Washington earlier this year better. Whereas Pollock‘s creations leap farther forward, Rothko‘s meditative stiliness is more deeply soothing. But emphatically yes, Pollock does belong in the pantheon. 

 Of course, there‘s more to Pollock than simply his work. He was part of the heroic effort of the abstract expressionists to liberate American painting not only from the provincial, homespun realism of Grant Wood and Thomas Hart Benton (Pollock‘s mentor) but also from what they considered the effete, small-scale modernism of the school of Paris. lt‘s not much of an understatement to say that Pollock, more than any other painter, helped move the headquarters of modern art from Europe to America. Pollock‘s comet also arrived at a time when New York was unarguably the greatest city on earth, a place where the best of the best and most daring of the daring could really shine. ,,Death of a Salesman“ and ,,A Streetcar Named Desire“ helped create world-dass theater on Broadway. In Brooklyn, Jackie Robinson made baseball a game for everybody. Norman Mailer‘s first novel, ,,The Naked and the Dead,“ redefined American literature. And Charly Parker, Dizzy Gillespie and Miles Davis led a renaissance in jazz. Pollock himself may not have cared for be-bop, preferring swing instead, but his drip paintings fit right in with it. Half a century later, with the mounting of the most extensive Pollock show ever, a symmetry is apparent. New York is booming again. Although serious theater, complex jazz and cutting-edge art may not yet equal the brilliance of the late ,40s and early ,50s, the conditions for a major revival seem present. Crime is down, Wall Street is up, and some truly adventurous people think that teeming, immigrant-rich Gotham is once again the place to fly.

 The problem is that Pollock the man — or, really, Pollock the myth — can cloud our appreciation of his work. His lifelong battle with booze and his history of sociopathic outbursts (peeing in Peggy Guggenheim‘s fireplace, overtuming a fully laden dinner table, various barroom punch-ups) give rise to the suspicion that bis achievement might have been a sort of desperate accident. And his sudden death — in a drunken car crash in 1956, at the age ofjust 44 — lends a James Dean-like aura to his life.

 MoMA‘s answer to the question of greatness, in the show‘s catalog essays, is to carefully downplay Pollock‘s troubled soul. Because ,,Pollock often gets cast as the last action hero, a ,natural‘ beat bobemian and a bastion of tortured purity and authenticity,“ writes curator Kirk Varnedoe, ,,it gets hard to demarcate cause from effect, image from reality.“ Yet in spite of what the catalog says, the museum‘s marketing campaign sells Pollock the man. One ad shows a still from the famous 1951 Hans Namuth film, shot through a sheet ofglass on which Pollock's painting, bis brow furrowed with intense concentration. Another has him posed in a T shirt in front of a drip painting, like a Method actor about to emote. (The museum also wants to avoid the overly dry interpretation of Pollock, espoused by the late critic Clement Greenberg, that has him painting as if in a laboratory, trying to resolve spatial problems left over from cubism.) In fact, there‘s good reason to play up Pollock the moody man. His whole life was a catharsis; his art looks cathartic; it is cathartic.

 In the generations since Pollock died, hordes of other artists have tried to invent, or reinvent, new ways of handling paint.They‘ve shot bullets into pods containing the stuff and let it bleed down the canvas. They‘ve sprayed it on with airbrushes, piled it on inches tbick with trowels, scraped it down and slashed the canvas. They‘ve sanded their way through dried layers of it, and smeared nude models with it and bad them squirm around on canvases on the floor. They‘ve even indulged in oversize spinpaintings, the kind your kidmakes at the grammar-school fair. But none of them has had the impact Pollock had. Part of that is due to Pollock‘s talent, but anotherpart is due to the cultural moment. When Pollock first dripped, the most outrageous cultural phenomena were Mailer‘s soldiers muttering ,,fug.“ Today we‘ve got everything from semen jokes in ,,There‘s Sometbing About Mary“ to performance artist Ron Athey‘s cutting anotber man onstage and making ,,prints“with the blood. These days you‘vegot to splatter body fluids, not just paint, to shock anyone.

 In today‘s overpopulated, media-obsessed art world, tbe hottest new artists are slacker painters who crank out quick, vacuous portraits of supermodels, and photographers who tart up fashion shoots with bondage. Their ,,daring“ amounts to being merely trendy. As for the bohemian deprivation that Pollock suffered until fairly late in bis career, a recent Columbia University study of artists in four major American cities reveals that half have retirement plans, and 8O percent health insurance. And the famous ones appear in Gap ads and direct Hollywood movies. It‘s hard to imagine Pollock in this crowd. On the other hand, Pollock himself would likely be celebrated today for overcoming an absent father, struggling with alcoholism and laboring outside the modern art mainstream (that is, lOOmiles from Manhattan, in a glorified Hamptons shed). In the touchy - feely‘90s, he‘d be looked up to mostly for “addressing the issue of identity“ because, as the catalog notes, he “repeatedly tried to reinvent bimself.“

 The black-tie dinner for the Pollock opening at MoMA in the fall was the most packed and excited in years. The likes of comic genius Steve Martin and real-estate baron Mortimer Zuckerman sbowed up to hobnob witb a mob of curators, trustees and other collectors. The congratulatory speeches had the euphoric ring of the pulpit, and the diners had the gospel bounce of a congregation at Easter. Pollock, of course, was present in spirit only. Were he alive, be might not have been invited, given bis tendency to get drunk and flip tables. And maybe he would have been too disturbed to behave well. He would have seen what inevitably happens to great modern art born from an artist‘s struggle with bis personal demons. It becomes trophies for the rich and then, after a decent interval, public attractions on the cultural tourism trail. But if that didn‘t happen, Pollock‘s paintings wouldn‘t be in public for us to applaud.And applause, as Aristophanes said, is what artists want. A little urine in tbe ashes aside, Pollock would have been delighted to take a well-deserved bow.



  Artikel aus der WAZ vom 19.7.1999




Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Tim Coppens Meets Franz Kline

Franz Kline

Tim Coppens Meets Franz Kline

tim-coppens-franz-kline.jpg

If you're wondering why some of the pieces in the Fall 2013 Tim Coppens collection might seem familiar, maybe you've recently been to a modern art museum. Franz Kline was a modernist painter who was part of the abstract expressionist movement in New York in the 1940s and 50s. He was famous for his abstract paintings of black streaks on a white canvas. Several shirts and coats in the Tim Coppens show have a similar pattern of black streaks on white. And we love it when a collection reminds us of one of the great painters of the 20th century.
franz-kline-harleman.jpg
Franz Kline's Harleman, 1960. Mnuchin Gallery


Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Rober Oblon / Painting Number 7

Robert Oblon, Painting Number 7

Robert Oblon, Sr.
Painting Number 7, 1986
 

48 x 36 inches
Oil on Canvas
© 1986 Robert Oblon, Sr.



PAINTING NUMBER 7
by Robert Oblon, Sr.



Robert Oblon, the artist, has been casting bronze since the early 70s. His work is a narrative surreal imagery using the female breastplate as his palate. His bronze sculpture are taken from live models using molds taken directly from the model and then derives a wax pattern positive of the breastplate that he then refashions to create his image. The artist may spend months on a single concept before he feels that the sculpture is ready for the bronze casting process. Once the sculpture is cast in bronze, he finishes the bronze himself. Some of these works have been mounted on the wall and his most recent sculpture have been placed on a fabricated steel base to bring them off the wall and into the realm of real life. The sculpture are "in your face" in the sense that you first see them as traditional figurative sculpture, but upon further inspection, the viewer is taken by surprise as to the image in front of them. Oblon has taken what we might assume is traditional figurative sculpture and transformed it into surreal image using other body parts to function as nipples and some of the sculptures, he has replaced the breast nipple with salt shaker heads of cast silver as a means of his narrative story telling of our preoccupation with the female body and in his case "how we are fixated on the female breast and it's function".

ABSTRAC ART





Daniel Buren / De la Coureur de la Matière

Daniel Buren
Daniel Buren (b. 1938)
De la Coureur de la Matière,
 1945
79 x 79 inches
Natural and painted pine wood

De la Coureur de la Matière
By Daniel Buren



Daniel Buren was born in Boulogne-Billancourt, France in 1938. He attended the Ecole Superiure de Metiers d'Art in Paris in 1960. In the beginning of his artistic career, he was associated with the conceptual artists of the time. Protesting traditional art, Buren reduces his paintings to a series of uniform, infinite vertical bands. In 1967, he wrote a manifesto with Toroni, Parmentier and Mosset where they established themselves as different kinds of artists. He has participated in the Venice Biennale and his work has been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Art Institute of Chicago, Tokuro Museum of Contemporary Art, Tokyo. His work can be found in the permanent collections of Museo di Capodimonte, Naples, and Castello di Rivoli Museo d'Arte Contemporanea, Italy.








Michael Goldberg / Iron Mountain

Edward_Dugmore
Michael Goldberg Iron Mountain, 1960
110 5/8 x 65 inches
Oil on canvas
Mannie Silverman Gallery, Los Angeles


IRON MOUNTAIN
by Michael Goldberg

“The declamation of scale and luminosity were followed by a successive pairing down of means and change of tone in Goldberg's expression. By 1960 the surfaces had becone thicker and more of a piece, with a few primary gestures of white plowing into their dark crust. Their range of allusion is minimal. They art tragic rituals from the vantage point of a mournful chorus.

Because of both a need for the expansion of elemental gestures and the avaiability of a new and larger studio, the size of the pictures increased to immense proportions. in some paintings, white stripes trail and jut across washes of brick red or dense green with rough, veined areas and mat silences. The defination is all in the placement and changes of textures. The lines becone protagonists trying to take and hold positions against the clay of these parts. In other paintings, the lines are left out and all that remains is a monochromatic field activated by shiny and matte sections, sometimes triangles or squares, that seem to open up and then immediately close of deep vistas in the center. Goldberg called these his most 'introverted' paintings.”

— Bill Berkson, Art News, January 1964



Sunday, February 16, 2014

Darby Bannard / Two Works


Darby Bannard
Darby Bannard
Tomoko
, 1999
43 3/4 x 55 1/2 inches 
Acrylic on canvas


Darby Bannard
Darby Bannard Jumeau Dunes, 2002
45 x 37 1/2 inches
Acrylic on Canva
Two Works
by Darby Bannard 


Darby Bannard is an internationally recognized abstract painter who has had 75 one-man shows, including several retrospectives, and hundreds of group shows in a long career. His work is in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Whitney Museum of American Art and the Guggenheim Museum and most other major museums here and abroad.


Professor Bannard is also a noted writer, having published dozens of articles in Artforum, Arts, Art in America and many other magazines and journals. He conducts seminars on contemporary art based on his direct experience within the mileau of post-war painting andsculpture in New York. He is the recipient of a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, a National Foundation for the Arts grant and many other awards.