Abstract expressionism

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    Abstract Expressionism "New needs need new techniques. And the modern artists have found new ways and new means of making their statements ... the modern painter cannot express this age, the airplane, the atom bomb, the radio, in the old forms of the Renaissance or of any other past culture." Jackson Pollock Rarely has such a massive transfer of influence has ever touched the world as did in the Paris to New York shift of the 1940's and 1950's. All of the characters of American art were

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    Abstract Expressionism

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    Abstract Expressionism is making its comeback within the art world. Coined as an artist movement in the 1940’s and 1950’s, at the New York School, American Abstract Expressionist began to express many ideas relevant to humanity and the world around human civilization. However, the subject matters, contributing to artists, were not meant to represent the ever-changing world around them. Rather, how the world around them affected the artist themselves. The works swayed by such worldly influences

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    Abstract Expressionism In the early fifties, the United States witnessed the emergence of the hydrogen bomb and Miltown sedatives, a Cold War repression and consumerism began to shape the post-war society. In this unshaped world, the abstract expressionists materialized their desperate striving for spontaneity, freedom and the re-discovery of self and the human context. Their romantic, anti-capitalist hope, with all its weaknesses and contradictions, was telling them that the values embedded

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    The Encyclopedia Britannica reads “Abstract Expressionism, broad movement in American painting that began in the late 1940s and became a dominate trend in Western painting during the 1950s.” Abstract Expressionism was the first art movement to emerge from within the United States. During World War II, European refugees came to the US to avoid persecution; many of which settled in New York City. Among those seeking a safe haven where artist, writers and poets as well as collectors of the arts. Paris

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    Abstract Expressionism Essay

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    abstract expressionism It was a full 170 years after Americans had their political revolution that they won an aesthetic revolution. American art to get rid of its inhibiting mechanisms- provincialism, over-dependence on European sources, and an indifferent public- and liberate itself into a quality and expressive force equal to, or exceeding that of art produced anywhere within the period. Few would argue that the painting and sculpture that emerged from the so-called New York School in the

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    Abstract Expressionism is considered a triumph in American Painting. It is still the most discussed and debated form of twentieth century American art, and still influences generations of artists. It used the cultural references of the tragic, the unconscious, the sublime and the primitive to create a unique and evocative style of painting that was unique in the art world. Though some may view Abstract Expressionism and Surrealism as similar, the thing that made it fundamentally different, according

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    “Of all the arts, abstract painting is the most difficult. It demands that you know how to draw well, that you have a heightened sensitivity for composition and for colours, and that you be a true poet. This last is essential.” - Wassily Kandinsky. OVERVIEW / GENERAL PRESENTATION OF CONCEPTS Art historians typically identify the early 20th century as an important historical moment in the history of abstract art as artists worked to create what they defined as "pure art" - creative works that were

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    Abstract expressionism, was a movement in American painting that flourished in the 1940s and 1950s, often referred to as the New York School or as Action Painting. Abstract expressionism according to Katy Siegel was a “creative earthquake that altered the landscape of modern art”. This movement had been considered as especially ‘American’ in style, this was because of its attention to the physical adjacency of paint. It had allowed artists to break away from accepted conventions in both technique

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    came to America as a stowaway, and made port in Virginia. Later in his life, he traveled to New York, and it was there he found his home. According to The Art Story, experts label de Kooning as one of the most influential Abstract Expressionist painters. Surrealism, Expressionism, and Picasso’s Cubism heavily influenced his work. He is known for “action painting”, which means that the piece itself feels like it is still in motion based on a variety of techniques and characteristics. A couple wiled

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    American Abstract Expressionist movement became a vital tool to the CIA, and the art form was weaponized through propaganda. Though, throughout this time period, “the great majority of Americans disliked or even despised modern art,” it was an essential art movement in the 1950s and 1960s, and the “CIA fostered and promoted American Abstract Expressionist painting around the world for more than 20 years,” creating a meaningful impact on the outcome of the Cold War (Saunders). “Abstract Expressionism

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