24 September 2016 — 2 January 2017
Exploring an unparalleled
period in American art, this long-awaited exhibition reveals the full breadth
of a movement that will forever be associated with the boundless creative
energy of 1950s New York.
In the “age of anxiety”
surrounding the Second World War and the years of free jazz and Beat poetry,
artists like Pollock, Rothko and de Kooning broke from accepted conventions to
unleash a new confidence in painting.
Often monumental in scale,
their works are at times intense, spontaneous and deeply expressive. At others
they are more contemplative, presenting large fields of colour that border on
the sublime. These radical creations redefined the nature of painting, and were
intended not simply to be admired from a distance but as two-way encounters
between artist and viewer.
Arshile Gorky,
Water of the Flowery Mill,
1944.
It was a watershed moment
in the evolution of 20th-century art, yet, remarkably, there has been no major
survey of the movement since 1959.
This autumn we bring
together some of the most celebrated art of the past century, offering the
chance to experience the powerful collective impact of Pollock, Rothko, Still,
de Kooning, Newman, Kline, Smith, Guston and Gorky as their works dominate our
galleries with their scale and vitality.
Mark Rothko,
No. 15, 1957.
We will also acknowledge
the lesser-known figures who contributed to the development of the movement.
Finally, we will include photography and sculpture to complete an ambitious
re-evaluation of the phenomenon that saw New York take over from Paris as the
capital of the art world.
The exhibition will be
curated by the independent art historian Dr David Anfam, alongside Edith
Devaney, Contemporary Curator at the Royal Academy of Arts. Dr Anfam is the
preeminent authority on Abstract Expressionism, the author of the catalogue
raisonné of Mark Rothko’s paintings and Senior Consulting Curator at the
Clyfford Still Museum, Denver.
Exhibition organised by the
Royal Academy of Arts, London with the collaboration of the Guggenheim Museum
Bilbao.
https://www.royalacademy.org.uk/exhibition/abstract-expressionism
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