The 1958 New American Painting exhibition catalogue |
In 1958, the Museum of Modern Art organized an exhibition of first-generation
Abstract Expressionists under the title "The New American Painting". They sent
it on tour to some eight European capitals where the paintings were well
received. The title, however, was not. There were growing suspicions that it wasn't, in fact, "new". Art critic Harold Rosenberg summed it up succinctly: "Today it is felt that a new art mode is long overdue, if for no other reason than the present avant-garde has been with us for fifteen years... No innovated style can survive that long without losing its radical nerve and turning into an Academy." He dismissed second-generation Abstract Expressionists as "method actors", having lost any innovative edge.
Girl on the Beach, 1954, Richard Diebenkorn |
The question of what was to replace Abstract Expressionism found a whole host
of candidates waiting in the wings. Pop Art emerged, as did Minimalism, but so
did representational art and in particular, a sort of rediscovery of "the
figure". Two artists came forward to lead this renaissance--Richard Diebenkorn,
and Philip Pearlstein. Diebenkorn (1922-1993) had, at one time, been an
Abstractionist, teaching at the California School of Fine Arts where he was
influenced by his colleagues Mark Rothko and Clyfford Still. However, by the
mid-fifties he began to once more use a model, and though his work continued to
bear abstractionist painting techniques, he was able to capture new emotional
elements associated with his figures which seemed to him more universal than
that he'd experienced with Abstract Expressionism. In doing so, he was accused
to "caving in" to West Coast "provincial" tastes.
Models with Mirrors, 1956, Phillip Pearlstein |
Philip Pearlstein (b. 1924), also fled Abstract Expressionism when it seemed
to him to have lost it's edge. Over a period of several years, his paintings
became more and more descriptive, eventually evolving into Photo-Realism.
However, unlike Diebenkorn, any emotional attachment to his figures was often
negated by his habit of hiding models heads or merely cropping them using the
top edge of his canvases. The result was that his nude figures (often with
less-than-ideal physical proportions), though extremely realistic, became mere
compositional elements, often twisted, overlapped, or cropped in such a way as
to not only eliminated any erotic overtones, but any individual identity as
well. In these two artist we see one, returning to subjective painting but in an
abstract style, while the other retained the strong compositional attachment of
Abstraction but in a realistic mode.
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