In the wake of unprecedented destruction and loss of life during
World War II, many painters and sculptors working in the 1940s grew to believe
that traditional easel painting and figurative sculpture no longer adequately
conveyed the human condition. In this context, numerous artists, including
Barnett Newman, Pollock, and others associated with the so-called New York
School, were convinced that abstract styles—often on a large scale—most
meaningfully evoked contemporary states of being. Many of the artists
represented in Epic Abstraction worked in large formats not only to explore
aesthetic elements of line, color, shape, and texture, but also to activate
scale's metaphoric potential to evoke expansive—"epic"—ideas and
subjects, including time, history, nature, the body, and existential concerns
of the self.
Beginning June 24, 2019, Epic Abstraction will feature a selection
of newly installed works, including major examples by Sam Gilliam, Lee Krasner,
and Frank Stella, among others.
#MetEpicAbstraction
https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2018/epic-abstraction-pollock-herrera
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