Abstract Expressionism
(Late 1940's - early 1960's)
Abstract expressionism was an
specifically American post-World War II art movement. It was the first American
movement to achieve worldwide influence and also the one that put New York City
at the center of the art world, a role formerly filled by Paris.
After WWII, with images of the
Holocaust everywhere, it seemed redundant for socially-aware artists to paint
these same images ... a photograph at the time was much more powerful. Artists
began to explore color and shape and to paint an entire canvas orange or blue.
These works were produced in an
extremely specific geographical setting and revealed a specific attitude. It
was the result of the rivalry and dialogue between young American artists and
the large community of European artists living in exile in New York.
Additionally, it has an image of being rebellious, anarchic, and highly
idiosyncratic and, some feel, rather nihilistic. It is seen as combining the
emotional intensity and self-expression of the German Expressionists with the
anti-figurative aesthetic of the European abstract schools such as Futurism,
the Bauhaus and Synthetic Cubism. The movement describe formal trend in
American abstraction at the time. It can be broadly divided into two groups:
Action Painting and Color Field and Hard-Edge Painting. It has its non-American
parallels with similar aims (Art Informel, Cobra, Lyrical Abstraction).
By the 1960s, the movement had
lost most of its impact, and was no longer so influential. Movements which were
direct responses to, and rebellions against, abstract expressionism had begun,
such as pop art and minimalism. However, many painters who had produced
abstract expressionist work continued to work in that style for many years
afterwards.
Action Painting(late 1940's - late 1950's)
One of the significant streams
of Abstract Expressionism is the Action Painting. The term "Action
Painting" was used for the first time in 1952 to describe the works of
painters such as Jackson Pollock, Franz Kline and Willem de Kooning. The life
energy and the psyche of the painter were at once the driving force, the
resource and the meaning of these works. The canvas was seen as an arena.
Painting became an irrational, instinctive and impulsive moment of existence.
The Action Painting work thus turned into the form and trace of the living
body, conveying split-second action and motion.
Another significant stream of
Abstract Expressionism is the Color Field and Hard-Edge Painting. The terms
Color Field and Hard Edge describe two formal trends in American abstraction in
the early 1960's. Color Field works consist of large colored areas; neither
signs nor forms existed for the eye to latch on to. Color was used without any
perspective device, producing a sensation of impressive size. The shades of
color were usually diluted so as to sink into the canvas.
The expression Hard Edge
appeared in the late 1950's to describe geometric abstract works, which
emphasized colorful atmospheres and imprecise shapes. Hard Edge works were
typified by their clearly defined outlines and edges and the precision and
clarity of the compositions.
(Late 1940's - early 1960's)
d clarity of the compositions.
Hiç yorum yok:
Yorum Gönder