‘Fifties, Other Tendencies

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Presentation transcript:

‘Fifties, Other Tendencies

Josef Albers (German-US, ) selections from series, Homage to the Square: (top right) Ascending 1953; and (lower right) Atuned, 1958, both are oil on masonite. Émigré Bauhaus master, influential teacher at Black Mountain College ( ) and Yale University ( ) Albers’ 1963 Interaction of Color, a classic pedagogical text

Page from Albers’ Interaction of Color

Helen Frankenthaler (US, b. 1928), Mountains and Sea, 1952, charcoal and oil on unprimed canvas, 7’2” x 9’9” “Post-Painterly abstraction,” “Color Field Painting” (late “Modernist” painting)

Helen Frankenthaler in 1950 on seeing Pollock's paintings, Autumn Rhythm and Lavender Mist: “It was as if I suddenly went to a foreign country and didn't know the language, but had read enough, and had a passionate interest, and was eager to live there. I wanted to live in this land. I had to live there, and master the language." Photograph: Jackson Pollock (far left) with Lee Krasner (far right), Clement Greenberg, unidentified child, and Helen Frankenthaler at the beach near Springs, Long Island. Unidentified photographer, ca

Helen Frankenthaler, Magic Carpet, 1964, 96 X 68 inches, acrylic on canvas Color Field Painting

Morris Louis (US, ), Tet, 1958, synthetic polymer on canvas, 8 x 13ft. Influence of Frankenthaler (1953 visit) and Clement Greenberg

Morris Louis, Dalet Kaf, 1959, acrylic resin (Magna) on canvas, 100 x 143 in

Morris Louis, Buskin, magna on raw canvas, 1959, 79 X 104 in., Hirshhorn, D.C.

Jules Olitski (Ukrainian-US, ) (right), Draky 1966, and (left) Comprehensive Dream, both are 120 x 92 inches, acrylic on canvas. Greenbergian Formalism – Color Field – Post-Painterly Abstraction

Kenneth Noland (US, ) Turnsole, 1961, synthetic polymer paint on unprimed canvas, 7' 10 1/8" x 7' 10 1/8“ “Noland made his first completely individual statement when, as he said, he discovered the center of the canvas.” (Arnason p.533) Visitor in front of Turnsole in 2004

Ellsworth Kelly (US b. 1924), Red Blue Green, 1963, c. 84 x 136 inches, oil on canvas, Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego

Ellsworth Kelly (b. 1923), installation at the Broad museum of contemporary art, Los Angeles, February, 2008.

Grace Hartigan (US, ), Summer Street, 1956, oil on canvas

Grace Hartigan, New England October, 1957, oil on canvas 68 x 83 in. Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, N.Y.

New York School poet, Frank O’Hara and Grace Hartigan published together in Folder, a independent magazine (New York )

(left, at table) Frank O’Hara, Larry Rivers, Grace Hartigan (and David Smith standing at far left) at the Five Spot, NYC 1957 (right) Larry Rivers, Jack Kerouac, David Amram, Allen Ginsberg, Gregory Corso “New York School”poets and Beat poets

Larry Rivers (US painter, sculptor, printmaker, poet and musician, ) Portrait of Frank O’Hara,1954, o/c, 97"/ 53” Rivers and O’Hara at work on collaborative lithograph, 1958

Larry Rivers, Double Portrait of Berdie, oil on canvas, 1954

Larry Rivers, The Greatest Homosexual, 1964, oil, collage, pencil and colored pencil on canvas, 80 X 61 in. Hirshhorn,

Clyfford Still (US, ), 1951 (right) Mark Rothko,1952 Taught at the California School of Fine Art (now San Francisco Art Institute) Abstract Expressionist influence on Bay Area painters: David Park, Elmer Bischoff, and Richard Diebenkorn

David Park (US, ), (left) Seated Man in a T-Shirt, 1958, SFMoMA (right) Art, Nature & Civilization, 1934, WPA Mural, San Francisco, Hayes Valley (below right) Three Violinists and Dancers, WPA Social Realism Bay Area Figurative Expressionism

David Park, Torso (detail, right) 1959, SFMoMa "David was keen about Abstract Expressionism as long as it had the immediacy and tangibility and goopy sensuous arrangement of forms, but when it got into the very serious 'views of the cosmos' he didn't go along with that." (Elmer Bischoff)

Richard Diebenkorn, (US, ),Coffee, 1958, o/c (right) Woman in Profile, 1958, o/c Bay Area Figuration

Richard Diebenkorn, (left) Berkeley #23, 1955; (right) Ocean Park No. 54, 1972; Both oil on canvas, Collection SFMOMA.

Elmer Bischoff (US, ), Two Figures on the Seashore, 1957, o/c (right) Orange Sweater, Bay Area Figuration

Joan Brown,Fur Rat, 1962, wood, chicken wire, plaster, string, raccoon fur, and nails; 20 x 54 x 14 in. University of California, Berkeley Art Museum, Bay Area Funk (Beat) and Figuration overlapped. Joan Brown was a student of Elmer Bischoff part of both movements. Exhibition of works from the early 70’s including cardboard sculptures (begun in her kitchen from household materials while her studio was under renovation) Joan Brown c.1960

Joan Brown (US, ), Bay Area Figuration, student of Elmer Bishoff (left) Wolf in Studio, enamel on masonite, 90 x 48”, 1972, Crocker MA, Sacramento (right) Self With Fish, 1970 Brown is second generation Bay Area Figuration

Bruce Conner (US ) Suitcase, , 22x24x9" / crayon on paper, fabric, beads on lace, glitter, soot, wax, graphite and a plastic yo-yo.

A still from “A Movie,” a 1958 short by Conner selected for preservation by the National Film Registry. Conner’s films were assemblages of found footage.

Bruce Conner, Inkblot Drawing 5/28/1995, a Rorschach-like ink-and-pencil work. Conner worked with a wide variety of visual media.

Jay De Feo, The Rose, , 129 x 92 x 11 in., oil on canvas with wood and mica, weighs over a ton. Whitney MAA Works on view now at SFMoMA

Cover of the influential anthology of writings by Dada artists and writers edited by Abstract Expressionist painter, Robert Motherwell, 1951 (In 1951 “painter” was a synonym for “artist.”) (In 1951 “painter” was a synonym for “artist.”)

(left) Italian Futurist music event, 1913, The music of chance and “noise,” including the sounds of urban life; (right) Hugo Ball performing Dada poem at the Cabaret Voltaire in Zurich, Switzerland, 1916 New York Dada In Advance of a Broken Arm by Marcel Duchamp, 1915 Jean Arp, Collage Arranged According to the Laws of Chance, Dada Sources for Neo-Dada of the 1950s

John Cage (US, ) early 1950s, prepared piano, aleatory (chance) music, Zen Buddhism and the I Ching (Book of Changes) "In the nature of the use of chance operations is the belief that all answers answer all questions.“ Don’t try to change the world, you’ll only make it worse. -Cage

Allan Kaprow (US, ), 18 Happenings in 6 Parts, Reuben Gallery, NYC, 1959 Art News, October 1958, published Allan Kaprow’s article, "The Legacy of Jackson Pollock,” which was an analysis of Pollock's work and a meditation on the meaning of Pollock’s death (1956) for the painting avant-garde.

LACE (Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions) and artist Steve Roden reinvented 18 Happenings in 6 Parts (1959/2008) over five nights from April 22 through April 26, 2008.

Allan Kaprow, Yard, Martha Jackson Gallery, NYC 1961; compare (right) Pollock painting, 1950 From “Action Painting” to performance art. Young artists of today need no longer say, "I am a painter" or "a poet" or "a dancer." They are simply "artists." All of life will be open to them. - Allan Kaprow, “The Legacy of Jackson Pollock,” 1958 (Artnews)

Allan Kaprow, photograph from Household, a Happening commissioned by Cornell University, Open link below for 2008 re-enactment s of Happenings for the MoCA Los Angeles Allan Kaprow retrospective

Marcel Duchamp (center) with Carolyn Brown and Merce Cunningham after a performance of Walk Around Time. Sound by John Cage, set (after Duchamp’s Large Glass) by Jasper Johns. Mid-1960s Neo-Dada Rrose Sélavy by Man Ray, 1920

Marcel Duchamp,The Large Glass or The Bride Stripped Bare by her Bachelors, Even, (below) photo of Duchamp by British Pop artist, Richard Hamilton, c.1968

Jasper Johns (US, b.1930), Flag. 1954–55, encaustic, oil, and collage on fabric mounted on plywood (three panels) 42 1/4 x 60 5/8" MoMA NYC. Literal, conceptual painting. Parodic gestures of Abstract Expressionism are congealed in wax, thus contradicting and reifying the aesthetic of individualism. Johns’ flags and targets, numbers and letters were “things the mind already knows... things that were seen and not looked at, not examined.”

Jasper Johns, Target with Plaster Casts, 1955, encaustic and collage on canvas with objects, newsprint visible beneath the wax, 51 x 44 x 3.5” A target is already flat (reference to Greenberg and Kenneth Noland) A “sign,” a “thing the mind already knows.”

Jasper Johns, Painted Bronze, hand painted cast bronze (one of two casts), 5.5 x 8 x 4.75”, 1960, Proto-Pop (Neo-Dada) In 1960, Johns heard that de Kooning had complained of Leo Castelli, Johns famous dealer: "That son-of-a-bitch, you could give him two beer cans and he could sell them." Johns then made this and Castelli sold it.

Jasper Johns, False Start, 1959, oil on canvas, 67 1/4 x 54" “It was as though the painter standing in front of the canvas, brush in hand, found that what was on the end of that brush was no longer a medium of wordless expression: it was art history, art criticism, art theory, concepts … words.” Charles Harrison “Conceptual Art, the aesthetic and the end(s) of art” (Themes)

“It’s a different art world from the one I grew up in. Artists today know more. They are aware of the market more than they once were. There seems to be something in the air that art is commerce itself.” Jasper Johns, 2008

Robert Rauschenberg (US, ), seated on Untitled (Elemental Sculpture) with White Painting (seven panel) behind him in the basement of Stable Gallery, New York (1953). Paintings were used for the famous Black Mountain “Event” of 1952 by John Cage, who acknowledged that the White Paintings enabled him to compose in August 1952 his iconic 4'33‘‘, during which the pianist sits at the piano but does not play. Neo-Dada John Cage’s statement for the 1953 Stable show: White Paintings: "... No subject/ No Image/No taste/No object/No beauty/No message/ No talent/No technique.../No idea...“

Fred McDarrah (US, b. 1926), Dillon's Bar, University Place: Frank O'Hara, Robert Rauschenberg, Merce Cunningham, John Cage, Jasper Johns, and Anna Moreska, Nov. 10 at Dillon's Bar, NYC,1959 (right) Rauschenberg, Merce Cunningham, John Cage on tour with the Merce Cunningham dance company

Robert Rauschenberg, Carolyn Brown, and Alex Hay, Pelican, (MoMA archival footage, 41 seconds): Pelican was presented first at America on Wheels, a roller skating rink in Washington, D.C. on May 9, 1963 in conjunction with "The Popular Image" at the Washington Gallery of Modern Art.

Robert Rauschenberg, Bed, Combine painting: oil and pencil on pillow, quilt, and sheet on wood supports, 6' 3 1/4" x 31 1/2" x 8" Gift of Leo Castelli. Neo-Dada, horizontal production and vertical display, like Pollock Detail: iconoclastic, scatological treatment of paint, an anti-aesthetic, post-Abstract Expressionist parody of gesture painting. “Paint” includes toothpaste and nail polish.

"I could never make the language of Abstract Expressionism work for me -- words like 'tortured,' 'struggle' and 'pain,' I could never see those qualities in paint. How can red be 'passion’? Red is red. Jasper and I used to start each day by having to move out from Abstract Expressionism.“ Robert Rauschenberg

(left) Robert Rauschenberg, Erased de Kooning Drawing,1955, SFMoMA, Neo-Dada; (right) Willem de Kooning, Woman 1, oil on canvas, 1952, MoMA NYC, Abstract Expressionism. Art after Abstract Expressionism has been called “The Academy of the Erased De Kooning.”

As his contribution to an exhibition of portraits, Robert Rauschenberg sent a telegram to the Paris Galerie Iris Clert in 1961, which said: 'This is a portrait of Iris Clert if I say so.‘ Neo-Dada proto-conceptualism

Rauschenberg, Monogram, , Combine: oil and collage on canvas with objects. Emblem of the artist who “destroys” painting? What could the dingy tennis ball behind the goat signify? The tire?

2005 exhibition of Robert Rauschenberg’s Combines from the 1950s Metropolitan MA, NYC

Robert Rauschenberg, Factum I and Factum II, 1957, oil, ink, pencil, crayon, paper, fabric, newspaper, printed reproductions, and painted paper on canvas, 61 x 35“. Nearly identical mixed media paintings that parody the “originality” myth of the avant-garde, especially Action Painting’s “signature” gesture.

Robert Rauschenberg on stage in Paris for performance painting with New Realist artists, Target of real flowers by Jasper Johns. Niki de Saint Phalle “shoot painting,” Tir, against back wall. Kinetic sculptor Jean Tinguely looks through stage curtain.

Rauschenberg, (left) Tracer, oil & silkscreen ink on canvas, 84 x 60”,1963 (right) Retroactive I, “I don’t want a picture to look like something it isn’t. I want it to look like something it is. And I think a picture is more like the real world when it’s made out of the real world.” A photograph is an actual trace of the real world.

Jiro Yoshihara (Japan ), Painting, 1960 founded Gutai (Gutai Bijutsu Kyokai - Concrete Art Association) in Osaka in 1954 When Jiro Yoshihara died in 1972 the Gutai Art Association was dissolved.

Shozo Shimamoto (Japan 1928), (left) Ana (Holes), 1954, oil on layers of pasted newspapers, pierced, 46 x 36”, Tate London. Gutai movement (right) Painting, 1955, oil on paper, slashed and punctured

Atsuko Tanaka (Japan, ), Electric Dress [as performance (left) and display as object (right)] 1956, Gutai Blinking incandescent lights covered with red, blue, yellow, and green enamel paint. Flashing on a circuit, the shapes and colors of the figure wearing the costume changed constantly, giving the impression of a body in constant motion even when standing still. “I was seated on a bench at the Osaka station, and I saw a billboard featuring a pharmaceutical advertisement, brightly illuminated by neon lights. This was it! I would make a neon dress!” - Tanaka The “dress” also references the traditional kimono and the nervous system of the body

Atsuko Tanaka Electric Dress performance photos, 1956, Gutai Presages the extreme and sometimes dangerous performances of the 1970s feminist movement.

Saburo Murakami, Gutai perfomance: Smashing Through (21 panels of 42 papers) second Gutai exhibition, Tokyo, 1956 Internationally, performance art of the post-WW II era came out of painting.

Kazuo Shiraga (Japan b. 1925), Challenge to the Mud, Gutai performance, 1955 Art as a marriage of concept and raw material: the Gutai notion of allowing the “cry of the material”

Shiraga, Second Gutai exhibition,1956, “action” painting (verb) with feet; (center below) Painting (object) (right) Gutai exhibition of Shiraga’s paintings (objects) made with feet