Title: Abstract Expressionism
1Abstract Expressionism
- "Lavender Mist" 1950 by Jackson Pollock.
2What is Abstract Expressionism?
- ABSTRACT
- Non-representative
- Non-Figurative
- - ie. does not show us a window onto the world
- EXPRESSIONISM
- Artists expresses themselves and their emotions
through colour, line, form - Canvas becomes
- arena in which to act (Harold Rosenberg)
It is not so much a style as a common approach
Focuses on the PROCESS rather than the
PRODUCT Abstract Expressionism was centred in New
York the New York School
3Art Critic - Harold Rosenberg
- Redefined Abstract Expressionism as Action
Painting - The canvas went from
- a space in which to reproduce, re-design,
analyze or express an object, actual or
imagined. - TO
- arena in which to act
4Gestural painters
JACKSON POLLOCKLavender Mist WILLEM DE
KOONING Woman 1
LEE KRASNER Noon 1947
5Colour Field Painters
- Mark Rothko Barnett Newman
6THE ROOTS OF ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISMWhere did
this art movement come from?
- EUROPEAN MODERN ART
- Cubism, Surrealism, Abstraction
- EARLIER AMERICAN ART
- ORIENTAL ART
- MEXICAN MURAL PAINTING
7EUROPEAN ABSTRACT ARTISTS
- Kandinksky Red Yellow Blue
- Paul Klee Dream of Winter
- Cubism e.g Braque
- Flattening of 3D forms onto
- 2 D picture plane
8Hans Hoffman
LEFT Cathedral 1959 BELOW Cataclysm 1945
- German artist who had mixed with Fauves and
Cubists - 1931 came to USA
- 1944 One man show at Peggy Guggenheims gallery
- Worked in Cubist style and more expressionist
style - Original use of colour
- Energetic line
- Use of paint anticipated Pollocks drip painting
9 SURREALISM
- For Surrealist artists, the PROCESS and METHOD
was very important - They aimed to express the true function of
thought by tapping into the unconscious, and
freeing themselves from reason - Interest in dreams
- PSYCHIC AUTOMATISM giving expression to the
unconscious by giving up control of the conscious
mind. Artist is passive and receptive and lets
the art / thought flow automatically.
10The Influence of Psychoanalysis
- The Surrealists interest in dreams was
influenced by Psychoanalysis - Founder Austrian Sigmund Freud
- KEY IDEAS
- Ego, Superego, Id
- Conscious / Unconscious
- Interpretation of Dreams (book published in 1900)
- Free association
- Transference / projection
- Libido (sexual desire main driving force)
- Repression of painful memories
11ARSHILE GORKY
- IMPORTANT INFLUENCE FOR AB-EX ARTISTS
- Arrived in USA in 1920
- Emotionally fragile, tragic death
- SURREALIST artist
- Used automatism
- BIOMORHPIC FORMS organic, look like body parts,
or ripe, blossoming fruits - LINES - curved, convey movement
When something is finished that means its dead,
doesnt it? I believe in everlastingness. I
never finish a painting, I just stop working on
it for a while. (Gorky)
12THE BETROTHAL (GORKY)
- the canvas that confronts us is almost nakedly
autobiographical. These apparently unspecific
forms nevertheless speak with great precision
about what the painter feels and is. We sense
the painters own masochism from the way in which
the forms seem to attack each other. Claws and
tendrils spout from what is apparently soft and
harmless. - (E. Lucie-Smith, ART TODAY)
13HOW SURREALISM INFLUENCED ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONIST
ARTISTS
- Importance of process and method
- Automatism giving up reason / control to free
the unconscious - Using art to access the psyche
14Andre Bretons instructions HOW TO PRODUCE A
SURREALIST TEXT
- Have someone bring you writing materials after
getting settled in a place as favourable as
possible to your minds concentration on itself.
Put yourself in the most passive, or receptive
state you can. Forget about your genius, your
talents and those of everyone else. Tell
yourself that literature is the saddest path that
leads to everything. Write quickly, without a
preconceived subject, fast enough not to remember
and not to be tempted to read over what you have
written.
15Automatic Writing
- a technique used by artists to put themselves in
touch with their own subconscious. - Get out a blank piece of paper and a pen/pencil.
- Allow your thoughts and associations to flow out,
without impediment. - Do not stop, just keep writing.
- (we will use music to help create a mood, and
pictures to prompt youbut this would not
necessarily always be done) - http//www.youtube.com/watch?voOH3QETdleEfeature
fvw
16AUTOMATIC WRITING EXERCISE
17JACKSON POLLOCKS AFFINITY with the SURREALIST
APPROACH
- When I am in the painting, Im not aware of what
Im doing. It is only after a sort of get
acquainted period that I see what I have been
about. I have no fears about making changes,
destroying the image, etc, because the painting
has a life of its own. It is only when I lose
contact with the painting that the result is a
mess.
18INFLUENCE OF EARLIER U.S. ARTISTS Georgia
OKeefe (1920s)
- Large scale abstract paintings based on organic
forms (flowers, plants) challenged the realist
style of American art of the time - Based in New York / New Mexico
- 1956 Retrospective exhibition at MOMA 1st
ever for woman artist
19Oriental Art
- Chinese Calligraphy influential
- Brush stroke is very important flow of ink
conveys emotion / meaning - Use of chinese characters (ideograms) as signs
that convey meaning - Influential for artists like Lee Krasner
Ary Stillman
20PRIMITIVE ART
- Artists looked at Native American Indian art and
Pre-Columbian art - Robert Matta (Chilean Surrealist) was impt in
bringing Native American art to the fore - Belief that Primitive art was more in touch
with the Unconscious
21Navajo Sand Painting
- Jackson Pollock was fascinated by Mayan symbols
and Navajo sand painting for its ritual and the
manner of painting.
Artist work make large gestures and work on the
ground. Symbols took on meanings in the story
/mythology
22MEXICAN MURALISTS
- Los Tres Grandes were Diego Rivera, Jose
Clemente Orozco and Alfred Siqueiros. All left
wing Mexican artists who worked in the USA. - INFLUENTIAL because
- Large scale works
- All worked in a realist style but Orozco drew on
elements of Surrealism, while Siqueiros was more
expressionist - strong, gestural brush strokes conveyed feeling
Siquieros From the Dictatorship to the Revolution
1957
Orozco Advance 1940
23EXISTENTIALISM
- Being is doing
- Philosophy of Jean-Paul Sartre
- Emerged after Great Depression / WWII time of
great despair, people felt alienated wondered
about the meaning of life. - About finding self and the meaning of life
through free will, choice, and personal
responsibility. - People are searching to find out who and what
they are throughout life, as they make choices
based on their experiences, beliefs, and outlook
ABOVE Jean-Paul Satre with wife and
existentialist Simone De Beauvoir.
24Some Key Existentialist ideas
- Humans have free will
- Human nature is chosen through life choices
- By making choices, then having different
experiences we create our own nature / identity - A person is best when struggling against their
individual nature, fighting for life - A person is best when they are authentic being
true to themselves, own values - Decisions are not without stress (angst) and
consequences . - Importance of subjective truth
- Personal responsibility and discipline is crucial
25How EXISTENTIALISM influenced ARTISTS
- 1. Being is doing focused on the PROCESS
rather than Product. The Painting was the record
of the artists actions (and therefore, self). - 2. Artists would exercise their
- Free will
- Choice
- Authenticity
- In the creation of art works in a process of
working out their identity and personal truth. - 3. Existentialism emphasised originality.
The artist was willing to have descendents but
not ancestors. - Bad faith (prior knowledge not personally
experienced) had to be avoided in art.
26JUNGIAN PSYCHOANALYSIS
- Jackson Pollock in particular was very interested
in these ideas as he had Jungian psychoanalysis - Carl Jung was a Swiss psychiatrist follower of
Sigmund Freud, who developed Analytical
psychoanalysis - Believed in the importance of bringing our
UNCONSCIOUS to the CONSCIOUS realm, developing
self knowledge.
27JUNGIAN ARCHETYPES
- Archetypes are "the existence of definite forms
in the psyche which seem to be present always and
everywhere." Jung - myths
- symbols
- Characters
- Rituals
- that organise, direct
- inform human behaviour
28Jungian Psychology and Art
- Art as an outlet for frustrated emotion
- Artists can being their subconscious to the
conscious realm through acting out on the
canvas. - Through the process of art-making, artists can
acquire self-knowledge
29ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONISTS believed
- If they emptied their minds of preconceptions
and applied pigment with a maximum of
spontaneity, the images they made would be an
expression of the deepest levels of their beings
Art became a method of self-realization. - (Anthony Everitt)