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THE END OF THE AGE OF EUROPE AND EMERGENCE OF NEW YORK SCHOOL (left) Hitler occupies Paris, 1940 Artists in the Artists in Exile show at the Pierre Matisse.

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Presentation on theme: "THE END OF THE AGE OF EUROPE AND EMERGENCE OF NEW YORK SCHOOL (left) Hitler occupies Paris, 1940 Artists in the Artists in Exile show at the Pierre Matisse."— Presentation transcript:

1 THE END OF THE AGE OF EUROPE AND EMERGENCE OF NEW YORK SCHOOL (left) Hitler occupies Paris, 1940 Artists in the Artists in Exile show at the Pierre Matisse Gallery, New York, March, Left to right, first row: Matta, Ossip Zadkine, Yves Tanguy, Max Ernst, Marc Chagall, Fernand Léger; second row: André Breton, Piet Mondrian, André Masson, Amédée Ozenfant, Jacques Lipchitz, Pavel Tchelitchew, Kurt Seligmann, Eugene Berman

2 END OF THE AGE OF EUROPE AND EMERGENCE OF THE NEW YORK SCHOOL Max Ernst, Europe After the Rain, , oil on canvas, 21 x 58,” Surrealist automatist technique of decalcomania, which involves pressing paint between two surfaces

3 American Abstract Expressionism “The New York School”
After World War Two New York City replaces Paris as the capital of the art world

4 “The Irascibles” (Abstract Expressionists), Life Magazine cover story, 1951
Theodoros Stamos, Jimmy Ernst, Barnett Newman, James Brooks, Mark Rothko, Richard Pousette-Dart, William Baziotes, Jackson Pollock, Clyfford Still, Robert Motherwell, Bradley Walker Tomlin, Willem de Kooning, Adolph Gottlieb, Ad Reinhardt, Hedda Sterne

5 ABSTRACT EXPRESSIONIST ACTION PAINTING (left) Jackson Pollock (US, ) painting, (right) Willem de Kooning (US, born Holland,1904–97) painting Woman I, 1951

6 Willem de Kooning making an early study for Woman I, c
Willem de Kooning making an early study for Woman I, c (right) Woman I,

7 Willem de Kooning, Woman I, Venus of Willendorf, limestone, painted with ochre, 4 3/4 inches, ca. 25,000 years old

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9 De Kooning in studio, Springs, NY, 1960s

10 Willem de Kooning, Door to the River, 1960, oil on linen, 80 × 70 in

11 Jackson Pollock (American, ) painting in Springs NY studio, 1950 Action Painting – American Abstract Expressionism “I believe the easel picture to be a dying form.” (Guggenheim Application, 1947) James Dean in Rebel Without a Cause 8 August 1949 issue of Life magazine: first artist to become a media celebrity

12 (below) Jackson Pollock, Pasiphae, 1943 (right) André Masson (French Surrealist immigrant to NYC), Pasiphae, Surrealism (subjective mythos and automatism) and Jungian psychoanalysis: the collective unconscious

13 Jackson Pollock, Guardians of the Secret, oil on canvas 1943, SFMoMA

14 Jackson Pollock, Mural, 19'10" x 8‘1“, 1943, for Peggy Guggenheim’s apartment

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16 Hans Namuth, photographs and film stills of Pollock Painting, 1951

17 Jackson Pollock, Number 1, 1950 (Lavender Mist),1950, oil, enamel, and aluminum on canvas, 7’ 3” x 9’10 “, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

18 American Abstract Expressionism Chromatic Expressionism Painters of the Sublime Mark Rothko

19 Caspar David Friedrich (German, 1774 -1840), Monk by the Seashore, 1909-10, German Romantic Sublime

20 Mark Rothko, No. 14, 1960, o/c, 9.48 x 9.70 ft, SFMoMA

21 "The people who weep before my pictures are having the same religious experience I had when I painted them." Mark Rothko

22 (left) Mark Rothko, Untitled [Blue, Green, and Brown],1952 (right) Rothko in studio on West 53rd Street Studio 1952

23 Rothko Chapel suite of paintings, 1965-66, De Menil Collection, Houston, Texas, 1970
“I wanted to paint both the finite and the infinite…. I was always looking for something more.” Mark Rothko

24 David Smith (American, ) Smith at “Terminal Iron Works, Boiler-Tube Makers and Ship-Deck.” (Brooklyn NYC), iron-welding workshop used as Smith’s studio between

25 David Smith, (left) Jurassic Bird, painted steel, 1945 (right top) Specter of Profit, 1946 steel and stainless steel (right below) Smith’s notebook sketches from the Museum of Natural History

26 (left) David Smith, Australia, 1951, painted steel, 6' 7 x 8'12" x 16" (on cinder block base) “Drawing in space” (right) Julio Gonzalez (Spanish, ), Woman Combing Her Hair, 1932 (below center) Pablo Picasso (Spanish, ), Head of a Woman, 1933

27 David Smith around 1960, "drawing in space“ welding, construction, assemblage process: Surrealist & Action Painting automatism, spontaneity rather than preconception (right) Picasso, Guitar, 1914, sheet metal and wire (created after the cardboard Maquette for Guitar, 1912, shown on the wall of his studio with collages.

28 Smith, Hudson River Landscape, detail and two views, 1951 “Drawing in Space” (2-D perception?)

29 Smith, Tanktotems, ; (center top) Picasso, Bull’s Head, 1943; (center below) photo of tank tops c.1951) – anthropomorphism, found materials assemblage welding

30 David Smith, Zig IV, painted steel, 1963

31 Voltri series, 1962, 27 welded sculptures
in 30 days

32 David Smith, (left) Cubi XXVII, 1965, 111” H; (center) Cubi XVII, 1963, stainless steel
Detail showing polished surface “gesture”

33 Smith surveying his “personages” at Bolton landing, Smith died 2 years later in a pickup truck crash. The “Tragic Generation”


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