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Pablo Picasso, Guernica, 1937
-statement about tragedy in Spain-->Nazi bombers destroyed city of Guernica -Cubism
-somewhat surrealist-->play w/world of dreams -ghost-like, fragmented bodies -faces, even of animals are screaming
-gray wash based on black and white newspapers because P was in Paris and his knowledge of the event came from the newspaper -space is fragmented and doesn't quite make sense -->reflects chaotic mood of war
-can't make sense of entire space |
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Lee Krasner, Noon, 1947
-more about the action of painting and being in the moment then rendering realistically
-similarities to full fathom five, a painting by Pollock (her husband) was created around the same time -->uses the entire canvas
-->no need to put things or even shapes in their art -->all about gesture called these paintings her "Little paintings" |
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Jackson Pollock, Guardians of the Secret, 1943
-center symbolizes a secret being guarded
-wolf-like figure being born out of abstraction--> guarding a secret
-loose gestural mark-making
-beginning to play with dripping
-Freudian and Jungian influence due to Pollock exploring himself through psychotherapy |
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Hans Hofmann, The Third Hand, 1947 -exploration of liquidity of paint (influenced by dialogue with Pollock)
-interested in the properties of paint, only interested in materiality
- older then Krasner and Pollock, he starts a school in NYC, teaches both of them |
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Lee Krasner, Untitled, 1940
-Krasner studied under Hofmann-->he taught the push and pull method(every action must have a reaction in your painting, there must be a balance)
-Krasner is interested in line and uses heavy outlines to distinguish one part of the painting from another |
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Jackson Pollock, Full Fathom Five, 1947
-similar to Krasner's Noon, created around the same time --> uses entire canvas --> no need to render even shapes -->all about gestures -Pollock began working in a large barn with his canvas on the floor
-dripping is not chaotic, rather he moves his hand very carefully
-plays with the physicality of paint |
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Jackson Pollock, Autumn Rhythm, 1950
-created at the high point in his career
-he would work on the paintings on the floor but view them on the wall, sometimes he would ruin a painting by taking it too far |
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de Kooning, Excavation, 1950
-de Kooning's attempt to create a masterpiece/statement
-about the growth of NYC-->layers of NYC due to constant building on top of the past, physically and culturally, contains outlines of buildings, teeth, eyes
-process of searching for the painting, as if another painting is happening underneath the painting |
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de Kooning, Woman I, 1950-52
-going against pressure of the abstract by painting the figure
-many paintings painted over each other, painting, scraping away and repainting
-draws while creating paintings, cutting and pasting onto the canvas to see how this work
-fragmentation of the body -playing with ideals of women-->large lips, eyes and breasts with a small waist but creates something grotesque
-similar to venus of villendorf
-obsessed with the process of painting rather then the result, Greenberg has to tell him to STOP painting, that the painting was done already |
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Rothko, Earth and Green, 1955
-wants paint to sink into the canvas and stain canvas
-uses sponges, not about gesture (gestural group=de Kooning, Pollock and Krasner)
-color hums and radiates from the canvas
-interested in simple forms used to express complex ideas
-sense of some primitive landscape due to his use of horizontal lines
-never uses a hard edge--> no end of one color and beginning of another
-asks the question: what is the pure, expressive potencial of color? |
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Barnett Newman, Onement I, 1948
-calls line in center a "zip" -thickly painted--> vertical line creates a new hole in the canvas
-signature style
-used tape to create line
-oneness in sense of God-relating to sense of atonement/yom kippur
-act of creation and division
zip evokes God's separation of light and dark -->colors refer to Genesis -->red brown field of background=Earth |
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Jean Dubuffet, Large Sooty Nude, 1944
-interested in the art of the insane and children
--> appreciated these people's experience and truthfulness
-drawing of a body based on experience of the body, rather then artistic tradition
-resolutely resistent to ideas of beauty--> defies all conventions and expectations
-mixes paint with sand, gravel, charcoal, dust, broken glass-->paint becomes a thick paste and physicality of paint becomes important |
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Jean Dubuffet, Tree of Fluids, 1950
-created by layering thick paste made from paint, dust, charcoal etc and then a layer of just oil paint and then repeat-->shows physicality of human body
-woman's body is not wrapped up in ideals of beauty -body appears open |
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Alberto Giacometti, Woman With her Throat Cut, 1932-33
-Giacometti was interested in existentialism
-represents a violent and tragic victim of the human condition
-woman's body is splayed open
-meant to be displayed on the floor to enhance sense of terror |
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Alberto Giacometti, Man Pointing, 1947
-G was obsessed with the nature of perception
--> how does seeing define what we know?
-wanted to create the experience of seeing figures emerge from the distance-->the moment when you first perceive a person
-figures are fighting to exist in the air around them-->air is threatening to dissolve them
-generalized faces and bodies |
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Barnett Newman, Vir Hiroicus Sublimus, 1950-51
-translates to "Man Heroic and Sublime"
-pure solid read--> brush strokes are not visible -5 zips irregularly placed all in different colors act as anchors for the pure red
-statement against domestication of painting-->can't be hung over a mantle and forgotten about-->demands interaction
-meant to be viewed from close up-->viewer should be surrounded by it for an experience of the sublime |
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Francis Bacon, Painting, 1946
-called his paintings the result of "one accident of top of another
-originally a designer which influenced his work (the color of the walls-->very 50's, the bridge and roads etc)
-very frightening |
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Francis Bacon, Study After Velazquez's Portrait of Pope Innocent X, 1953
-B was very interested in art history
-contains element of the original portrait but with pope screaming horrifically
-absolute terror and fear-->sense of blur and motion like fallin down an elevator shaft
-blur and movement lines reference photography
-sense that figure is imprisoned in space =splattered red is referencing blood |
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Lucian Freud, Interior, in Paddington, 1951
-Freud was obsessed with diving in deep-->no detail too small to render
-elements of distortion-->F dives deep into individual parts so that overall picture becomes slightly distorted-->this doesn't matter to F because his art is about obsession |
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Lucian Freud, Woman Smiling, 1958/59
-F is looking obsessively close to the figure
-->leaves the viewer uncomfortable-->no one should get to scrutinize another this closely
-figures eyes are averted--> uncomfortable with closeness
-fascination with the non ideal human body
-thicker brush strokes and oils result in a more sculptural image |
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Andrew Wyeth, Christina's World, 1948
-debate over whether W was great--> very popular, two sides to arguement
1."magical realism"-->finding the uncanny and surprising in the everyday world
2.christina could not walk so she dragged herself around, ie a sentimental fluff story
-formal element that work in the painting to give the viewer a feeling of unease-->tiny house in distance, tracks of truck in field, gloominess of sky |
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Norman Rockwell, The Connoisseur, 1962
-R did covers of the Saturday Morning Post thus spoke to a broad American audience
-for many years illustration was considered lesser art
-depicted fleeting moments -differences between Pollock and Rockwell's work
-P-->viewer is supposed to perceive the whole, find a meaning, explore
-R--> presents a narrative, perceived in parts |
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Helen Frankenthaler, Mountains and Sea, 1952
-stain painting--> dilutes paint with turpentine and didn't prime canvas thus linen absorbs the paint
-sense of spontaneity, accident and exploration -importantly different from what other artists were doing-->less action then Pollock and de Kooning
-critics spoke about her art differently because she was female-->saying that she was not in control of the paint, fundamentally passive |
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Morris Louis, Russet, 1958
-part of his veil series
-very thing paint a la Frankenthaler but not described by critics through gender influences
-paint was poured from the lop of the canvas, letting it fall and stain canvas
-non-material quality, like just paint floating |
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Morris Louis, Alpha Tau, 1960-61
-his unfurled series -sort of like a veil inside out a lot of white in the middle, Why?-->asks what is a painting/enough to create a painting
-colors appear particularly pure next to white |
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Kenneth Noland, Bridge, 1964
-N called these shapes chevrons
-playing with intense color -->organizing colors around shape of canvas and edge of canvas to create a negative space
-insistence on the optical, physical limits of canvas |
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Cy Twombly, The Italians, 1961
-takes idea of action paintings and pushes it in a different direction-->does action painting need to be done with a paintbrush?-->uses pencil, crayon, oil
-draws and then covers them up
-moves to Rome and becomes interested in Italian history-->sketches have sense of accrued historical stories
-sketchy, messy, gritty-->connection to graffiti
-interested in chaos-->the gritty and the dirty |
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Robert Rauschenberg, White Painting (3 panels), 1951
-R spent a summer at Black Mountain College in North Carolina--> tons of important art ppl there
-all different types of art practiced together a la the Bauhaus-->intermingling artists
-R inspired by composer John Cage who wrote 4 min and 33 sec (just listening to the world for that amount of time) -->artist's highlighting the everyday world and showing that it is special what is the line btwn art and the world?
-these canvases were painted completely white -acted as a screen for shadows to fall on
-contingent on the surrounding world-->trying to capture everyday life on a canvas |
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Robert Rauschenberg, Erased de Kooning, 1953
-R asked de Kooning to give him a drawing to erase it
-ghost of drawing still there but pretty much erased, he spent a shit ton of time erasing it because de Kooning gave him a hard one to erase to try and one up R
-symbolizes wiping the ab-ex plate clean and moving forward
-emphasizes the importance of de Kooning by rendering drawing invisible--> makes viewer question what it once looked like |
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Robert Rauschenberg, Bed, 1955
-uses the actual quilt and pillow from R's bed
-flat-bed picture plane -->bed is something that defines our horizontal existence-->perfect subject for flat-bed picture plane
-paint is intersecting w/materiality of quilt and pillow
-why is paint on everyday objects considered a piece of art?
-perhaps R not quite confident that without paint it could be considered art |
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Robert Rauschenberg, Monogram, 1955-59
-powerful tension btwn junk and organized and tight |
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Robert Rauschenberg, Retroactive 1, 1964
-contingent on viewer's response to images
-used silkscreen
-what was the role of the Kennedy image?
-goes from using everyday objects to using images that are everywhere |
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Jasper Johns, Flag, 1954
-playing w/the idea of a found object
-something special about a flag-->its identity resides in the fact that it's symbol not in its material -->is he representing or presenting the flag
-viewer's reaction of the painting is contingent on their reaction to the flag
-flat-bed picture plane-->flat b/c a flag is flat not for greenberg's reason for flatness |
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Jasper Johns, Target with Plaster Casts, 1955
-target-->like a flag, does not have a material identity
-a target tells you where to look
-objects at top are fighting for attention from the target |
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Jasper Johns, Painting With Two Balls, 1960
-sense of drama and tension-->are bas about to be swallowed by the painting, or is the canvas being ripped open by the balls? |
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Allan Kaprow, 18 Happenings in 6 Parts, Reuben Gallery, NY 1959 |
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Jim Dine, The Smiling Workman, Judson Gallery, NY, 1960 |
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Yves Klein, Untitled Blue Monochrome (IKB82), 1959
-created painting to be rejected by the top salon in europe-->this was exactly what he wanted and based his whole career around it
-created resin with chemist friend-->paint fragile, very material like a sneeze would blow it away
-about the spiritual
-created many paintings that looked the same but priced them based on his perception of the amount of spiritualness |
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Yves Klein, Ritual for a Zone of Immaterial Pictorial Sensibility, 1959
-had ppl pay in gold, gave them a reciept that they had to destroy and then put half the gold in the seine river
-had ppl pay for a spiritual space |
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Yves Klein, Anthropometry, 1960
-used female models as "brushes" |
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Piero Manzoni, Achrome, 1958-59
-M saw Klein's show (he is also european) and was inspired
-created this very physical work |
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Piero Manzoni, Artist's Shit, 1961
-canned his own shit and sold it for its weight and gold
-is everything an artist makes art? |
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Piero Manzoni, Base of the World, 1961
-proclaimed all the world as Manzoni art by putting a pedistal at the "bottom" of the earth |
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