Abstract Expressionist New York: The Big Picture

The Museum of Modern Art - MoMA

Sunday 03 October 2010 to Monday 25 April 2011
The Alfred H. Barr, Jr. Painting and Sculpture Galleries, fourth floor. Subtitled The Big Picture, this installation of 100 Abstract Expressionist paintings and a rich selection of some 60 sculptures, drawings, prints, and photographs, occupies the entire fourth floor of the Museum and chronicles the era of Abstract Expressionism.

The movement drew together a host of artists with greatly varying stylistic approaches, but with a common commitment to the power of an abstract art that could express personal convictions and profound human values.

Organized in a loose chronology, intermittently interrupted by monographic galleries that allow for the in-depth study of an individual artist’s practice, the installation opens with a selection of paintings and drawings that attest to the acutely self-conscious sense of new beginnings present in the work of individuals such as Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko. In the immediate aftermath of World War II, they and their peers—not yet a cohesive group—created imagery that evoked primitive man or ancient myth, and conjured an aquatic or geological pre-human world.

Upon entering the galleries, visitors are greeted by Jackson Pollock’s The She-Wolf (1943), which was featured in the artist’s first solo exhibition, in 1943, and was the first work by Pollock to enter a museum collection when MoMA acquired it the following year. Made before Pollock developed his signature “drip” style, the canvas shows that a free-form abstraction and an unfettered play of materials were already parts of his process. Also on view is Mark Rothko’s Slow Swirl at the Edge of the Sea (1944), a canvas picturing two creatures floating between sea and sky, surrounded by arabesques, spirals, and stripes that betrays the influence of Surrealism on Rothko’s early work.

A monographic gallery devoted to the work of Barnett Newman includes Onement, I (1952), which the artist later identified as his breakthrough painting. Modest in size, it consists of a monochromatic background divided in half by a vertical band, or “zip” as the artist later called it. Every successive painting by Newman, as seen in the seven works in this gallery, features this particular compositional motif, although their formal and emotional differences are apparent. The scale and proportions of the paintings, as well as their palette and brushwork, vary from work to work, as do the number of zips and their location in the field of color. At the other end of the spectrum from this relatively small canvas is Vir Heroicus Sublimis (1950-51), an 18-foot-wide, vibrant red expanse that was Newman’s largest painting at the time of its creation.

The distinctive materials, techniques, and approaches developed and practiced by the Abstract Expressionists can be seen in a number of other works from the late 1940s and early 1950s. For Painting (1948), Willem de Kooning used oil and enamel sign paint to create a densely packed painting in which the paint drips, bleeds, congeals, or dissolves into delicate streaks. Lee Krasner’s Untitled (1949) shows that she applied thick paint—sometimes directly from the tube—in rhythmic and repetitive strokes, giving equal attention to every inch of the canvas and creating an allover composition. Bradley Walker Tomlin, in Number 20 (1949), and Adolph Gottlieb, in Man Looking at Woman (1949), distributed imagery evoking the alphabet and hieroglyphics evenly across their canvases.

A large gallery focusing on the work of Jackson Pollock includes Full Fathom Five (1947), one of earliest “drip” paintings, and Number 1A, 1948 (1948), the first drip painting to enter MoMA’s collection (in 1950). For One: Number 31, 1950 (1950), a masterpiece of the drip technique and one of Pollock’s largest paintings (8’ 10” x 17’ 5 5/8” [269.5×530.8 cm]), the artist laid the canvas on the floor of his studio and poured, dribbled, and flicked enamel paint onto the surface, sometimes straight from the can, or with sticks and stiffened brushes. The density of interlacing liquid threads of paint is balanced and offset by puddles of muted colors and by allover spattering.

Eight paintings made by Mark Rothko over a 14-year period are presented in a single gallery. The earliest examples from 1948, such as No. 1 (Untitled), feature variously sized abstract forms caught mid-motion as they shift on the canvas. Beginning in 1950, Rothko’s “classic” style forms as the artist creates a composition from horizontal planes of thinly layered paint and highly modulated color, simplifying the compositional structure of his paintings and arriving at his signature style. No. 10 (1950) is divided horizontally into three dominant planes of blue, yellow, and white that softly and subtly bleed into one another. Acquired by MoMA in 1952, it was the first Rothko to enter the Museum’s collection, and was considered so radical that a trustee of the Museum resigned in protest.

MoMA’s practice of making in-depth acquisitions of work by artists that its curators judged to be of greatest importance was complemented by acquisitions of smaller numbers of works by other artist who played roles too significant to be forgotten. The Big Picture includes paintings and sculptures by more than 20 artists.

There is a gallery devoted to a selection of photographs made by individuals who used a camera to explore kindred artistic concerns—often resulting in work with striking stylistic similarities. Aaron Siskind may be the photographer most closely associated with Abstract Expressionism, and numerous works of his on display suggest the depth of this connection. Also featured in this installation is work by Harry Callahan, Robert Frank, Minor White, and others, revealing the variety of ways in which the sensibility or structure of paintings from this period manifested itself photographically.

The exhibition includes some 30 items from the MoMA Archives, documenting the relation of the Museum to Abstract Expressionism. Materials represent the institution’s influential series of “Americans” exhibitions, organized by Dorothy C. Miller, which included several Abstract Expressionist artists in four of its iterations. In addition, documentation regarding the internationally circulating New American Painting show (also organized by Miller) is presented. This important exhibition travelled to eight European cities in 1958-59 and propelled the homegrown Abstract Expressionist movement onto the international art scene. A third section includes photographs of artists and their own statements and letters. Highlights include: exhibition catalogues, installation photographs, newsclippings, and ephemera; photographs of artists in the studio with their artworks; a letter from Robert Motherwell to Miller describing the four themes of his art (automatic means, pure abstractions, political or a kind of “disasters” series, and intimate pictures), a letter from Ad Reinhardt to Miller recommending a different installation of his paintings, and a statement by Grace Hartigan identifying her subject as the “vulgar and vital in American life, and the possibilities of its transcendence into the beautiful.”

Abstract Expressionist New York: The Big Picture is organized by Ann Temkin, The Marie-Josée and Henry Kravis Chief Curator of Painting and Sculpture; with Michelle Elligott, Museum Archivist; Sarah Meister, Curator, Department of Photography; and Paulina Pobocha, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Painting and Sculpture.

Location

The Museum of Modern Art - MoMA
11 West 53 Street
Midtown Manhattan Precinct
New York
United States
No. 5/No. 22. 1950
© All rights reserved Mark Rothko 2010 United States
Oil on canvas 9' 9" x 8' 11 1/8" (297 x 272 cm) The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gift of the artist.
Stenographic Figure
© All rights reserved Jackson Pollock 2010 United States
Oil on linen 40 x 56" (101.6 x 142.2 cm) Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bareiss Fund
Blast, I
© All rights reserved Adolph Gottlieb 2010 United States
Oil on canvas 7' 6" x 45 1/8" (228.7 x 114.4 cm) The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Philip Johnson Fund
Vir Heroicus Sublimis
© All rights reserved Barnett Newman 2010 United States
Oil on canvas 7' 11 3/8" x 17' 9 1/4" (242.2 x 541.7 cm) The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Heller
No. 3/No. 13. 1949
© All rights reserved Mark Rothko 2010 United States
Oil on canvas 7' 1 3/8" x 65" (216.5 x 164.8 cm) The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Bequest of Mrs. Mark Rothko through The Mark Rothko Foundation, Inc.
No. 16 (Red, Brown, and Black). 1958
© All rights reserved Mark Rothko 2010 United States
Oil on canvas 8' 10 5/8" x 9' 9 1/4" (270.8 x 297.8 cm) The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Mrs. Simon Guggenheim Fund
The She-Wolf. 1943
© All rights reserved Jackson Pollock 2010 United States
Oil, gouache, and plaster on canvas 41 7/8 x 67" (106.4 x 170.2 cm) Purchase
Number 1A, 1948. 1948
© All rights reserved Jackson Pollock 2010 United States
Oil and enamel paint on canvas 68" x 8' 8" (172.7 x 264.2 cm) Purchase
One: Number 31, 1950. 1950
© All rights reserved Jackson Pollock 2010 United States
Oil and enamel paint on canvas 8' 10" x 17' 5 5/8" (269.5 x 530.8 cm) Sidney and Harriet Janis Collection Fund (by exchange)
Number 7, 1950. 1950
© All rights reserved Jackson Pollock 2010 United States
Oil, enamel, and aluminum paint on canvas 23 1/16" x 8' 9 3/4" (58.5 x 268.6 cm) Gift of Sylvia Slifka in honor of William Rubin
Cover of the publication Abstract Expressionism at the Museum of Modern Art
© All rights reserved MoMA 2010 United States
Sky Cathedral. 1958
© All rights reserved Louise Nevelson 2010 United States
Painted wood, 11’ 3 1/2” x 10’ 1/4" x 18” (343.9 x 305.4 x 45.7 cm) The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gift of Mr. and Mrs. Ben Mildwoff
Cubi X. 1963
© All rights reserved David Smith 2010 United States
Stainless steel, 10’ 1 3/8” x 6’ 6 3/4” x 24” (308.3 x 199.9 x 61 cm) The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Robert O. Lord Fund
West 23rd. 1963
© All rights reserved Jack Tworkov 2010 United States
Oil on canvas, 60" x 6' 8" (152.6 x 203.3 cm) The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Purchase
1944-N No. 2. 1944
© All rights reserved Clyfford Still 2010 United States
Oil on canvas, 8' 8 1/4" x 7' 3 1/4" (264.5 x 221.4 cm) The Museum of Modern Art, New York. The Sidney and Harriet Janis Collection
Australia. 1951
© All rights reserved David Smith 2010 United States
Painted steel, 6' 7 1/2" x 8' 11 7/8" x 16 1/8" (202 x 274 x 41 cm), on cinder block base, 17 1/2 x 16 3/4 x 15 1/4" (44.5 x 42.5 x 38.7 cm) The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gift of William Rubin
Martha’s Vineyard. 1954–59
© All rights reserved Aaron Siskind 2010 United States
Gelatin silver print, 12 7/16 x 16 1/2" (31.6 x 41.9 cm) The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Purchase
No. 10. 1950
© All rights reserved Mark Rothko 2010 United States
Oil on canvas, 7' 6 3/8" x 57 1/8" (229.6 x 145.1 cm) The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gift of Philip Johnson
Fugue Number 2. 1943
© All rights reserved Richard Pousette-Dart 2010 United States
Oil and sand on canvas, 41 1/8" x 8' 10 1/2" (104.2 x 270.4 cm) The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Given anonymously
Full Fathom Five. 1947
© All rights reserved Jackson Pollock 2010 United States
Oil on canvas with nails, tacks, buttons, key, coins, cigarettes, matches, etc., 50 7/8 x 30 1/8" (129.2 x 76.5 cm) The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Gift of Peggy Guggenheim