abstract expressionism
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | Date: 2008
abstract expressionism movement of abstract painting that emerged in New York City during the mid-1940s and attained singular prominence in American art in the following decade; also called action painting and the New York school. It was the first important school in American painting to declare its independence from European styles and to influence the development of art abroad. Arshile Gorky first gave impetus to the movement. His paintings, derived at first from the art of Picasso , Miró , and surrealism , became more personally expressive.
Jackson Pollock 's turbulent yet elegant abstract paintings, which were created by spattering paint on huge canvases placed on the floor, brought abstract expressionism before a hostile public. Willem de Kooning 's first one-man show in 1948 established him as a highly influential artist. His intensely complicated abstract paintings of the 1940s were followed by images of Woman, grotesque versions of buxom womanhood, which were virtually unparalleled in the sustained savagery of their execution. Painters such as Philip Guston and Franz Kline turned to the abstract late in the 1940s and soon developed strikingly original styles—the former, lyrical and evocative, the latter, forceful and boldly dramatic. Other important artists involved with the movement included Hans Hofmann , Robert Motherwell , and Mark Rothko ; among other major abstract expressionists were such painters as Clyfford Still , Theodoros Stamos , Adolph Gottlieb , Helen Frankenthaler , Lee Krasner , and Esteban Vicente.
Abstract expressionism presented a broad range of stylistic diversity within its largely, though not exclusively, nonrepresentational framework. For example, the expressive violence and activity in paintings by de Kooning or Pollock marked the opposite end of the pole from the simple, quiescent images of Mark Rothko. Basic to most abstract expressionist painting were the attention paid to surface qualities, i.e., qualities of brushstroke and texture; the use of huge canvases; the adoption of an approach to space in which all parts of the canvas played an equally vital role in the total work; the harnessing of accidents that occurred during the process of painting; the glorification of the act of painting itself as a means of visual communication; and the attempt to transfer pure emotion directly onto the canvas. The movement had an inestimable influence on the many varieties of work that followed it, especially in the way its proponents used color and materials. Its essential energy transmitted an enduring excitement to the American art scene.
Bibliography: See M. Seuphor, Abstract Painting: Fifty Years of Accomplishment from Kandinsky to the Present (1962, repr. 1964); I. Sandler, The Triumph of American Painting: A History of Abstract Expressionism (1970); M. Tuchman, ed., The New York School: Abstract Expressionism in the 40s and 50s (rev. ed. 1970); S. Guilbaut, How New York Stole the Idea of Modern Art (1983); W. C. Seitz, Abstract Expressionist Painting in America (1983); F. Frascina, ed., Pollock and After (1985); D. Anfam, Abstract Expressionism (1990); S. Polcari, Abstract Expressionism and the Modern Experience (1991); A. E. Gibson, Abstract Expressionism: Other Politics (1997); D. Craven, Abstract Expressionism as Cultural Critique (1999).
Author not available, ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISM.,
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition 2008
The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press
Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Painter Giorgio Cavallon Dies; Pioneer in Abstract Expressionism
The Washington Post; 12/25/1989; 292 words
; Giorgio Cavallon, 85, a painter who is considered a pioneer of abstract expressionism, died Dec. 22 at a hospital in New York City. The cause of death was not reported. Though he was never wildly popular or widely known among the public at large, he had a large following among poets and other
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"The San Francisco School of Abstract Expressionism." (San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, California)
Artforum International; 11/1/1996; Plagens, Peter; 1054 words
; SAN FRANCISCO MUSEUM OF MODERN ART Whatever the revisionist revelations of Serge Guilbaut, Griselda Pollock, et al, the consensus on Abstract Expressionism remains that it was both the first great homegrown American art movement and the center of the greatest period in American art (roughly
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Reframing Abstract Expressionism: Subjectivity and Painting in the 1940s.
Art in America; 10/1/1994; Anfam, David; 2635 words
; Michael Leja's Reframing Abstract Expressionism is an ambitious and highly theorized study that adopts a narrow focus with the aim of drawing broad conclusions. Writing from a critical stance influenced especially by Michel Foucault and Louis Althusser, Leja sets out to uncover, and thereby to
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Terra exhibition brings abstract expressionism down to intimate size
Chicago Sun-Times; 2/18/1990; Garrett Holg; 1224 words
; Americans have always thought big. Big cars. Big homes. Big deals. Big money. In this land of the Whopper and the Big Mac, jumbo jets and megavitamins, we are taught from a very early age that bigger is better. Abstract expressionism was the biggest thing in American art during the postwar era.
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Philip Guston: abstract expressionism's provocative pioneer and ultimate critic.(Museum Today)(Biography)
USA Today (Magazine); 11/1/2003; 1032 words
; BEGINNING with his childhood fascination with popular American comic strips; through mural painting laden with political imagery; to easel painting and a burgeoning interest in, advancement of, and ultimate disenchantment with Abstract Expressionism; through his invention of a highly controversial
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Philip Guston: Abstract Expressionism's provocative pioneer and ultimate critic
USA Today; 11/1/2003; Anonymous; 1073 words
; "Significant artists are often those figures who make bold and difficult transitions . . . whose works reflect not only the aspirations and anxieties of their own generation, but of those that came before and after." BEGINNING with his childhood fascination with popular American comic strips;
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Abstract Expressionism. (Classroom Use).
Arts & Activities; 4/1/2002; Hubbard, Guy; 1119 words
; THINGS TO LEARN * Following the poverty of the Great Depression and the horrors of World War II, forward-looking artists no longer felt that the earlier art movements of the 20th century fit the times. They wanted to flee themselves from subject matter, and also believed that they should follow
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Abstract expressionism and the Cold War: did New York really steal the idea of modern art? Were the artists tools of U.S. policy? 25 years on, Serge Guilbaut's j'accuse can still prompt a fiery response.(ISSUES & COMMENTARY)
Art in America; 6/1/2008; Sandler, Irving; 10830 words
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Rally round the flag, boys. (artist Jasper Johns)
Newsweek; 10/28/1996; Plagens, Peter; 1011 words
; ... offered him a solo show on the spot. MoMA bought four paintings from that 1958 show. Flags begat targets begat numbers begat maps--all rendered with that minestrone-like surface that became Johns's trademark. Then he went loud with such paintings as False ...
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Abjection by other means: Sue Williams emerged in the 1980s as a controversial painter of sexually explicit subject matter. In recent years, taking cues from Abstract Expressionism and Color Field painting, she has moved ever deeper into abstraction, but, argues the author, corporeal themes have remained central to her work.
Art in America; 1/1/2002; Schwabsky, Barry; 1890 words
; Sue Williams's career since the 1980s has been characterized by metamorphoses of all kinds, but if anything has been consistently manifest in her attitude toward art-making, it is fearlessness. Or better yet, shamelessness. With its sardonic depictions of sexual brutality and emotional cruelty,
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