Color Fields
23 October 2010 - 16 January 2011
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| Kenneth Noland: Trans Shift, 1964, Acryl auf Leinwand, 254 x 288.3 cm
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Ankauf ermöglicht durch Elaine
und Werner Dannheisser und The Dannheisser Foundation 81.2812 |
| |
COLOR FIELDS
22 October 2010 - 10 January 2011
The early sixties marked a shift in sociopolitical attitude in the United States and many nations in Europe.
Whereas the leaders of the previous decades still had the Great
Depression and the cataclysm of World War II in their minds, a youthful
confidence characterized the next generation of leaders as well as
permeated contemporary culture. A similar realignment took place in the
arts. In the fifties and sixties many young, abstract painters in
America began to turn away from the hallmarks of much Abstract
Expressionism, particularly its emphasis on gesture and emotive content.
They moved in two general directions: a radically optical style later
given the name "Color Field painting”, and an image-based style called
"Pop art”, which adapted material from the mass media. While Pop art
constantly referred to contemporary society through its reconfiguration
of consumerist images, Color Field painting consciously distanced itself
from societal referents and focused on the lyrical possibilities of
color.
Historically, a multiplicity of terms—Abstract Sublime, Cool Art,
Hard-Edge painting, Lyrical Abstraction, and Post Painterly
Abstraction—have been applied to align these painters at a moment when,
for the first time since Impressionism, pure opticality held primacy
over content and form. The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York,
acquired several examples of this work at the time of their creation and
displayed them in landmark exhibitions of the sixties and seventies. In
1961, the Guggenheim Museum presented the exhibition American Abstract
Expressionists and Imagists, a survey of contemporary trends in art.
This exhibition made apparent that there was more diversity to New York
painting than just the gestural canvases of Action Painters. Art
historian H. H. Arnason organized the exhibition and among the artists
shown, identified Hans Hofmann and Mark Rothko for their use of
predominantly flat areas of color and geometry. Numerous exhibitions
addressing fields of color followed, most significantly prominent critic
and curator Clement Greenberg's Post Painterly Abstraction in 1964 at
the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and Lawrence Alloway's Systemic
Painting in 1966 at the Guggenheim.
The thirteen artists in Color Fields are among the many included in
these past presentations who were moving abstraction in new directions
while Pop art dominated the American art scene. Some artists applied
pigment in large expanses, even covering the entire canvas. Their work
emphasized the flatness of the picture plane, marking no distinction
between subject and background. Large-scale canvases by Helen
Frankenthaler, Morris Louis, and Jules Olitski exemplify Color Field's
expanses of color often stained into (rather than painted onto) the
support. These artists and their contemporaries, in spite of their
differences in technique—some applied paint with a traditional brush,
while others poured, rolled, soaked, or sprayed their pigments—all
explored the nuances and power of color at a moment when the United
States was embracing the energy of the youth, as well as trying to break
free from the tumult of the previous decades.
www.deutsche-guggenheim.de |