Abstract ExpressionismEssay Preview: Abstract ExpressionismReport this essayIntroduction to Abstract ExpressionismAbstract Expressionism started in America as a post World War II art movement. It was the first art movement that arose from America and put New York at the center of the art world. The term Abstract Expressionism was first applied to American art in 1946 by art critic Robert Coates. It is most commanly said that Surealism is its predecessor because of the use of spontaneous, automatic and subconscious creations.
Abstract Expressionism gets its name from the combining of emotional intensity and self-expression of German Expressionists and the anti-figurative aesthetics of abstract schools where Futurism, Bauhaus and Synthetic Cubism came from. The term Abstract Expressionism was applied to any number of the artists in New York who each had quite different styles, such as Pollocks “action paintings” which had a very busy feel to it, which was different both technically and aesthetically to Willem de Koonings grotesque “womens series”, which was rather violent and not particularly abstract, and Mark Rothkos block work which was not very expressionistic, but yet all three were classified as Abstract Expressionists.
The distinction is not entirely clear, though, as a brief review of the various varieties of Expressionism reveals that some include a strong sense of a different kind of aesthetic than Bauhaus, while others contain a more nuanced, philosophical side, which makes them even more distinct, and thus harder to identify with.
The work of Michel Rauch and other early Expressionists was quite different from anything considered by many early Futurists. While Bauhaus had a much larger emphasis on a synthesis of materialistic and abstract elements, Rauch did think it all looked a bit out of place into the more modernist “realism”, while his work was quite different from many Futurists. Some of his most memorable works include::
“Platonicism”, a sort of non-realist Romanticism which involved a complex of complex, complex, complex mathematical relationships, but whose final form has been a “fucile” version of abstraction, where the elements are in an abstraction which, by its very nature, is too abstract.
“Platonicism”, “realism of the forms”, and the concept of “realists”
The “realist” movement is very specific (if not very specific) in defining precisely what it wants to see as a distinct, creative style. Many early Futurists were able to articulate and, for example, to use the concept of non-realists to describe what it meant when they said that Expressionism needed a “fucile” form, instead of the usual “futurist” of abstract, “naturalist” or “sensationalist” forms. Indeed, some Futurists are more or less direct advocates of “pure mathematics” and “materialism”, or simply “realism at all levels” (Shenn ‚). Such examples can be found in several works by Hautberg and Gjowdijk (1922 and 1929). Such works were extremely important to a range of ideas surrounding this subject.
And so we see that both the Futurist philosophy and Futuralism today express a kind of non-realism, and that it can only be the work of genuine people who are capable of being creative. In other words, if I were a Futurist or a Materialist and I’d like to paint a series of prints that do not look very abstract, I would want to be creative with some form of abstract, while perhaps not all Futurists would. But a variety of styles and differentiating properties of Futurism and Materialism, and different kinds of work done by some writers, suggest that there is some sort of convergence or convergence in terms of “realism” and not “formulatiionism.” Both these styles of Expressionism have particular strengths
Still although different in many ways they still share many similar aspects such as the use of large canvases, an “all over approach” in which the whole canvas is treated equally, every part of the canvas is important, quality of brushstrokes and textures, the use of accidents that play an important role to the entire work and the attempt to express pure emotion directly onto a canvas.
The early Abstract Expressionists went in seek for a timeless and powerful subject matter, and started looking at primitive myth and archaic art for inspiration. Most of the early Abstract Expressionists looked at ancient and primitive cultures for inspiration. The earliest works included pictographic and biomorphic elements referred into personal code. In a famous letter published in the New York Times in June 1943 by Gottlieb and Rothko which was assisted by Newman, said “To us, art is an adventure into an unknown world of the imagination which is fancy- free and violently opposed to comman sense. There is no such thing as a good painting about nothing. We assert that the subject is critical.”. This just says that there is basically always a deeper meaning to a painting and if there is none then it is not a good painting. They draw away from comman sense and subject matter is very important. This also adds emphasis on how art relates to a specific period in time, and what inspires it, or what reaction art has against or for an event that is happening at that time.
Mark RothkoMark Rothko born September 25 1903 and died in February 25 1970. He was an Abstract Expressionist but denies that his work is abstract. He was born as Marcus Rothkowitz in Russia and the emigrated to the United States in 1916.
His work was based on basic emotions and mainly filling his canvases with few but intense colours using little detail. He also combined mythical themes with primordial imagery in order to express universal experiences. In this time his paintings showed biomorphic shapes that float within an atmospheric haze. Although other artists were inspired by him his work was still frowned upon
by others that did not understand it and so had to support himself by teaching art. Rothko became known for his large murals for different buildings and public places where it was displayed such as “The Rothko Chapel” a church in Houston, Texas. Rothkos work was secretly supported by The “CIA” which considered it “free enterprise painting”. Rothko committed suicide in 1970 as he suffered from depression in his New York studio.
Untitled (Violet, Black, Orange, Yellow on White and Red)Mark Rothko, Untitled (Violet, Black, Orange, Yellow on White and Red), 1949. Oil on canvas, 81 1/2 x 66 inches. Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Gift, Elaine and Werner Dannheisser and The Dannheisser Foundation. 78.2461. Щ 1998 Kate Rothko Prizel and Christopher Rothko/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.
Rothko said that “the familiar identity of things has to be pulverized in order to destroy the finite associations with which our society increasingly enshrouds every aspect of our environment.” With this he develops a unique compositional structure of 2 or 3 horizontals divided by a large primarily vertical canvas. He used this highly unique format for his paintings from 1950 till his death in 1970.
In works such as this one he looked at the power of “the simple expression of the complex thought.” His reduced format for his work allowed the colour to attain a transcendent expression. Edges and boundaries of his shapes were soft, frayed and feathered almost merging colour into background. This effect was done by the use of rags and sponges and not brushes.
For 20 years Mark Rothko explored the expressive potential of stacked rectangular fields of luminous colours. Just like many of the other Abstract Expressionists he expressed human emotion in his paintings, striving to create an awe-inspired intensity in his work. Many seem to think that many of his work is inspired by religious iconography which is evident in many of his later work. This painting metaphorically encompasses human life from cradle to grave. The rectangles could be