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ART 100
Summer 2016
MODERN ART
what makes it modern?
I. In terms of subject matter, there is an ongoing shift to
representing the lives of ordinary people. In this regard
the world of art gets a big assist from the invention of
photography, because it is increasingly likely that an
ordinary person may live to see an image of his or herself.
what makes it modern?
II. In terms of style, there is a serious reckoning with
the photograph. Now that likenesses can be made
mechanically, cheaply, and quickly, where does that
leave the traditional fine arts? Different artists
answer this challenge in significantly different
ways.
what makes it modern?
III. In terms of how art is made and sold, the "art
market" replaces the traditional system of
patronage. As a result, the artist's ability to make a
living becomes vastly more uncertain. At the same
time, art becomes a bit more independent. How
much it still serves the interests of the powerful
becomes an open question.
J.M.W. Turner, The Burning of the Houses of Parliament, 1835
When the Houses of Parliament in London burn to
the ground in 1835, artist J.M.W. Turner rushes to
the scene with his brushes. This event occurs just
before the invention of photography. There is no
way to "document" the scene with a photograph,
but Turner chooses the subject precisely for its
momentary quality—much like a typhoon or
thunderstorm that creates dramatic visual effects
before subsiding into calm weather. The heat,
smoke, and confusion of the fire on the far bank of
the Thames are mirrored by the agitated crowds
thronging the near bank,. Even the boats on the
river, jammed with curiosity seekers, are rendered
in choppy, excited strokes.
"A picture, before being a war horse, a nude
woman, or some anecdote, is essentially a flat
surface covered by colors in a certain order.”
—Maurice Denis
James Abbott MacNeill WHISTLER
Nocturne in Black and Gold: The
Falling Rocket
1875
Notice that Whistler also chooses
a momentary visual effect for this
painting: as the fireworks slowly
fade into embers and fall to earth.
Sparkling touches of gold on a
dark green ground create the
effect in paint.
Claude MONET, Water Lilies (The Clouds) 1903, oil on canvas, 29 3/8 x 41 7/16 in
Claude MONET, Water Lilies (The Clouds) 1903, oil on canvas, 29 3/8 x 41 7/16 in
In his late paintings, Claude Monet treasures the motif of the lily pond for its
ability to generate ambiguous reflections. Are we looking at an actual object, its
reflection, or both? In this way he insists that we are in the realm of the image
now.
"A picture, before being a war horse, a nude
woman, or some anecdote, is essentially a flat
surface covered by colors in a certain order.”
—Maurice Denis
In this comment, art critic Maurice Denis
points out that whether the image
resolves into a set of a figures in space—
to create what is known as a figural or
representational painting—or does not
resolve—remaining an abstract series of
shapes, it is made in the same way.
Once art is freed from its unique duty to represent the world
around us (as photography can now do the heavy lifting in a
variety of contexts), the artist has different choices before
her.
She can:
Keep painting in a representational manner. Many artists do
continue using the same techniques developed during the
Renaissance, employing oil paint, perspective construction,
and detailed study of the human form.
Keep painting, but allow her style to become more simplified
and abstracted, putting the direct focus on color and form on
canvas rather than subjugating those formal elements to the
depiction of recognizable forms in space.
Forget painting. Why bother? Anything that needs to be
represented can be photographed. Art now is free to discover
fresh possibilities, no longer enslaved to the representational
image.
Vincent van GOGH
La Berceuse (Woman
Rocking a Cradle), 1889
oil on canvas
36 1/2 x 29 inches
In this picture, we can
see a woman seated in
a chair with a faraway
expression on her face.
Her hands, which are
folded in her lap,
loosely hold a rope to
rock an infant's cradle.
Behind her is an
extravagantly
patterned wall that
contrasts boldly with
the red carpet on the
floor.
Although we can
recognize and name all
of these details—
making this a figurative
or representational
painting—van Gogh is
clearly compelled by
many other artistic
ideas here. Bold fields
of red, white and green
are juxtaposed in a
way that cannot be
entirely explained by
contemporary
convention of interior
decor and fashion.
Some areas receive
precise detailing (her
carefully combed hair,
callused hands, the
twisted cords of the
rope) while others are
suggested in a far
more simplified way,
such as the flat
expanse of red carpet,
the visible portions of
the chair, and the dark
green of her jacket).
The floral wallpaper is
alternately highly
detailed and almost
sketchy, which creates
a strange effect where
we cannot decide if
these flowers are
printed on paper, or
actually popping off the
surface in the artist's
mind. Similarly, an odd
spatial effect is
creating by the fact that
wall meets the floor
quite a bit lower on the
left side of the picture
than the right, causing
a spatial wobble in the
picture.
Eventually, artists like Mark Rothko will forego the figure altogether, focusing instead on the
bold fields of color and curious spatial effects that van Gogh kept in the background.
Vincent van Gogh
Portrait of Joseph Roulin
1889
Oil on canvas
25 3/8 x 21 ¾”
Depth becomes less
important as surface
and background seem
to melt together. Once
again van Gogh uses
floral wallpaper to
confuse the eye about
spatial relationships, and
enjoys the rhyme
between the
postmaster's lushly curly
beard and the
extravagant floral motifs
of the paper.
Georges SEURAT, Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, 1884
Georges SEURAT, Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, 1884
Though Seurat uses conventional perspective to create the illusion of spatial depth,
his figures seem to lack volume and appear to be cutout shapes.
Paul GAUGUIN, Vision after the Sermon, 1888
oil on canvas, 28 ¾ × 36 ¼ inches
National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh
Painters like Paul
Gauguin depict the white
bonnets of faithful
worshipers as a mosaic
of white shapes against
a surprising red
background. A tree
branch twists across the
canvas, creating curious
spatial effects that
suggest a spiritual world
may be closer than we
think.
Paul Cézanne, Gulf of Marseilles seen from L’Estaque, c.1885, oil on canvas, 31.5 × 39.2 in
Paul Cézanne, Gulf of Marseilles seen from L’Estaque, c.1885, oil on canvas, 31.5 × 39.2 in
In contrast, Cézanne sees the French landscape as in terms of earthy geometric solids,
bringing a new sense of structure and solidity to the bright French landscape.
Paul Cézanne, Mont St. Victoire seen from Bellevue, c. 1885, 37.5 × 51.3 inches) Barnes Foundation
Paul Cézanne, Mont Sainte-Victoire and Château Noir, 1904-6, oil on canvas, 25.8 × 31.9 inches
Picasso, Portrait of Wilhelm Uhde, 1910
Catalan artist Pablo PICASSO
had no difficulty painting
representational pictures,
abstractions, and everything in
between. Here he fragments the
portrait of one of his art dealers
into rectangles and triangles.
Over time he will oscillate back and
forth between styles in a seemingly
effortless manner.
Picasso, Still Life with Chair Caning, 1912
Pablo PICASSO, Still Life with Chair Caning, 1912
For this collage, Picasso used wallpaper that imitated chair caning, and wrapped
the whole canvas in real rope. The other portions are painted in imitation of
various objects that might be found on a tabletop.
Picasso, Bottle of Vieux Marc, Glass, Guitar and Newspaper, 1913,
Picasso, Bottle of Vieux Marc, Glass, Guitar and Newspaper, 1913
In collages like this one, Picasso uses a newspaper to represent a newspaper, and
cut and pasted paper to represent the guitar, glass, and bottle.
Duchamp, Nude Descending a Staircase, 1912 Duchamp, Bottle Rack, 1914
Marcel Duchamp realizes that the dynamic forms that interest him can be
found in actual objects just as well as in painting.
The bottle rack on the left was a common object in French life, used for
drying out empty wine bottles before reusing them.
Duchamp, Tu M’, 1918
This painting of Duchamp's plays with illusion and reality, including a found object that
sticks directly out of the painting. The question Duchamp asks here: why paint a
representation of the object if you could just use the real thing?
Duchamp, L.H.O.O.Q., 1919 Duchamp, Rotary Demisphere (Precision Optics),
1925
Duchamp, Rotary Demisphere (Precision Optics),
1925
Duchamp creates his own "moving
pictures" in this work. The machine gets
plugged in and a series of different plates
can be selected.
Duchamp's last work is located behind a closed door, with only
a peephole allowing viewers to look inside.
This is what you see
through the peephole.
Now the viewer's real
body—and their desire to
see the work—is brought
into the realm of art,
further conflating the
represented and the real.
Marcel DUCHAMP
Fountain
1917/1964
glazed ceramic, paint
15 x 19 1/4 x 24 5/8 inches
Can "art" be nothing more than a framing device to get us to look at reality differently?
René Magritte, The Treachery of Images, 1928-9
In his own way, Belgian artist René Magritte asks a similar question, declaring
that a painting of a pipe can never be a real pipe.
Artists begin to feel a great freedom to use paint in different ways, or even to forget
about painting and use pictures clipped from magazines to express their ideas.
There are many different ways to put a recognizable figure together, and artists are
drawn to the challenge of finding new methods rather than relying on the old ones.
Ferdinand Léger
Woman with a Cat, 1921
Hannah Höch, The Beautiful Girl, 1920
Fernand LÉGER, The Red Table, 1920. AIC
While some artists experiment with different ways
of breaking down a scene and putting it back together,
others question the need for a subject altogether.
Why not just paint colors and shapes, for their own
intrinsic appeal?
Wassily KANDINSKY, Composition IV
1911
Oil on canvas, 62 7/8 x 98 5/8 inches
Sonia DELAUNAY, Simultaneous Colors, 1913
Paul KLEE, Castle and Sun, 1928
“There is no such thing as
‘abstract,’ or ‘concrete’… There is a
good picture and a bad picture.
There is the picture that moves you
and the picture that leaves you
cold… A picture has a value in
itself, like a musical score, like a
poem.”
—Fernand Léger
Here French artist Léger tries to explain that it doesn’t really matter whether a
picture has a subject matter.
Frantisek KUPKA, Self Portrait (The Yellow Scale) 1907
Sometimes the same
artist will move back and forth
between representational
and abstract modes of painting.
Frantisek KUPKA
Red and Blue Discs
1911
39 3/8 x 28 ¾" inches
Beat the Whites with the Red Wedge, painted signboard, 1919
El Lissitzky, Proun Room, 1923
El Lissitzky
The New Man,
from a portfolio of 10
lithographs,
published 1923
As it turns out the
abstract language of
color and shape can
transform back in
recognizable human
forms.
Grosz and Heartfield
Dada Picture
c. 1919
collage
Raoul HAUSSMAN
Mechanical Head (Spirit of Our Time)
1920
And assemblages of found objects
can produce a recognizably human
head.
First International Dada Fair, Berlin, June 1920, with participating artists
John Heartfield
Those Who Read Bourgeois
Newspapers Become Deaf and Dumb
1930
John Heartfield
Adolf, the Superman, Swallows
Gold and Spouts Junk
1932
John Heartfield uses found images
from published photographs, cuts
and pastes them back together to
create figurative images with a
political edge.
Hannah Höch
Bourgeois Wedding
Couple (Quarrel)
1919
In Dada works like this
one, and Surrealist works
as in the next 2
examples,
there is an interplay
between the "real" and
the represented, as found
objects and images are
embedded into the work.
Kurt SCHWITTERS
Merz 32A (Cherry
Picture), 1921
collage of colored papers,
fabrics, printed labels and
pictures, pieces of wood,
etc., and gouache on
cardboard background
36-1/8 x 27-3/4 inches
Max Ernst (French, born
Germany. 1891-1976)
Two Children Are Threatened
by a Nightingale (Deux enfants
sont menacés par un rossignol),
1924.
© The Museum of Modern Art,
New York
Max Ernst
Les Pleiades
1920
Salvador DALI, Lobster Telephone, 1936
“I do not understand why, when I ask for a grilled lobster in a restaurant, I
am never served a cooked telephone; I do not understand why
champagne is always chilled and why on the other hand telephones,
which are habitually so frightfully warm and disagreeably sticky to the
touch, are not also put in silver buckets with crushed ice around them.”
Meret Oppenheim
Object, 1936
Fur-covered cup, saucer, and spoon
© 2014 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / Pro Litteris, Zurich
Arshile GORKY
The Artist and His Mother
c. 1926-36
Some surrealists, like
Arshile Gorky, move between
more representational works, like
this portrait of the artist with his
mother...
Arshile GORKY (American, born Armenia. 1904-1948) Garden in Sochi c. 1943.
and more abstract ones, like this evocation of his lost childhood, now that he
is in exile.
I don’t like that word, “finish.” When
something is finished, that means it’s
dead, doesn’t it? I believe in
everlastingness. I never finish a
painting—I just stop working on it for a
while.
—Arshile Gorky, 1948
Gorky has an enormous influence on Willem de Kooning, who becomes a
premier American abstract painter.
Willem de Kooning
(American, b. The Netherlands,
1904-1997).
Woman, I, 1950-52
Oil on canvas
75 7/8 x 58 inches
Willem de
KOONING
Two Women at the
Beach
1953
“…if you pick up some paint with your brush and
make somebody's nose with it, this is rather ridiculous
when you think of it, theoretically or philosophically. It's
really absurd to make an image, like a human image,
with paint, today, when you think about it, since we
have this problem of doing it or not doing it. But then
all of a sudden it was even more absurd not to do it.
So I fear I have to follow my desires.”
—Willem de Kooning, in a 1962 radio interview
Born in Holland, emigrated to the US
Well-known abstract painter, active 1940s-80s
As de Kooning points out, it's somewhat absurd to make paintings,
whether they are figural OR abstract. He never makes a concrete decision,
alternating between both modes of making at different times in his
career and even in the same painting.

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UVC100Summer16_WedJune8

  • 2. what makes it modern? I. In terms of subject matter, there is an ongoing shift to representing the lives of ordinary people. In this regard the world of art gets a big assist from the invention of photography, because it is increasingly likely that an ordinary person may live to see an image of his or herself.
  • 3. what makes it modern? II. In terms of style, there is a serious reckoning with the photograph. Now that likenesses can be made mechanically, cheaply, and quickly, where does that leave the traditional fine arts? Different artists answer this challenge in significantly different ways.
  • 4. what makes it modern? III. In terms of how art is made and sold, the "art market" replaces the traditional system of patronage. As a result, the artist's ability to make a living becomes vastly more uncertain. At the same time, art becomes a bit more independent. How much it still serves the interests of the powerful becomes an open question.
  • 5. J.M.W. Turner, The Burning of the Houses of Parliament, 1835
  • 6. When the Houses of Parliament in London burn to the ground in 1835, artist J.M.W. Turner rushes to the scene with his brushes. This event occurs just before the invention of photography. There is no way to "document" the scene with a photograph, but Turner chooses the subject precisely for its momentary quality—much like a typhoon or thunderstorm that creates dramatic visual effects before subsiding into calm weather. The heat, smoke, and confusion of the fire on the far bank of the Thames are mirrored by the agitated crowds thronging the near bank,. Even the boats on the river, jammed with curiosity seekers, are rendered in choppy, excited strokes.
  • 7. "A picture, before being a war horse, a nude woman, or some anecdote, is essentially a flat surface covered by colors in a certain order.” —Maurice Denis
  • 8. James Abbott MacNeill WHISTLER Nocturne in Black and Gold: The Falling Rocket 1875 Notice that Whistler also chooses a momentary visual effect for this painting: as the fireworks slowly fade into embers and fall to earth. Sparkling touches of gold on a dark green ground create the effect in paint.
  • 9. Claude MONET, Water Lilies (The Clouds) 1903, oil on canvas, 29 3/8 x 41 7/16 in
  • 10. Claude MONET, Water Lilies (The Clouds) 1903, oil on canvas, 29 3/8 x 41 7/16 in In his late paintings, Claude Monet treasures the motif of the lily pond for its ability to generate ambiguous reflections. Are we looking at an actual object, its reflection, or both? In this way he insists that we are in the realm of the image now.
  • 11. "A picture, before being a war horse, a nude woman, or some anecdote, is essentially a flat surface covered by colors in a certain order.” —Maurice Denis In this comment, art critic Maurice Denis points out that whether the image resolves into a set of a figures in space— to create what is known as a figural or representational painting—or does not resolve—remaining an abstract series of shapes, it is made in the same way.
  • 12. Once art is freed from its unique duty to represent the world around us (as photography can now do the heavy lifting in a variety of contexts), the artist has different choices before her.
  • 13. She can: Keep painting in a representational manner. Many artists do continue using the same techniques developed during the Renaissance, employing oil paint, perspective construction, and detailed study of the human form. Keep painting, but allow her style to become more simplified and abstracted, putting the direct focus on color and form on canvas rather than subjugating those formal elements to the depiction of recognizable forms in space. Forget painting. Why bother? Anything that needs to be represented can be photographed. Art now is free to discover fresh possibilities, no longer enslaved to the representational image.
  • 14. Vincent van GOGH La Berceuse (Woman Rocking a Cradle), 1889 oil on canvas 36 1/2 x 29 inches In this picture, we can see a woman seated in a chair with a faraway expression on her face. Her hands, which are folded in her lap, loosely hold a rope to rock an infant's cradle. Behind her is an extravagantly patterned wall that contrasts boldly with the red carpet on the floor.
  • 15. Although we can recognize and name all of these details— making this a figurative or representational painting—van Gogh is clearly compelled by many other artistic ideas here. Bold fields of red, white and green are juxtaposed in a way that cannot be entirely explained by contemporary convention of interior decor and fashion.
  • 16. Some areas receive precise detailing (her carefully combed hair, callused hands, the twisted cords of the rope) while others are suggested in a far more simplified way, such as the flat expanse of red carpet, the visible portions of the chair, and the dark green of her jacket).
  • 17. The floral wallpaper is alternately highly detailed and almost sketchy, which creates a strange effect where we cannot decide if these flowers are printed on paper, or actually popping off the surface in the artist's mind. Similarly, an odd spatial effect is creating by the fact that wall meets the floor quite a bit lower on the left side of the picture than the right, causing a spatial wobble in the picture.
  • 18. Eventually, artists like Mark Rothko will forego the figure altogether, focusing instead on the bold fields of color and curious spatial effects that van Gogh kept in the background.
  • 19. Vincent van Gogh Portrait of Joseph Roulin 1889 Oil on canvas 25 3/8 x 21 ¾” Depth becomes less important as surface and background seem to melt together. Once again van Gogh uses floral wallpaper to confuse the eye about spatial relationships, and enjoys the rhyme between the postmaster's lushly curly beard and the extravagant floral motifs of the paper.
  • 20. Georges SEURAT, Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, 1884
  • 21. Georges SEURAT, Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte, 1884 Though Seurat uses conventional perspective to create the illusion of spatial depth, his figures seem to lack volume and appear to be cutout shapes.
  • 22.
  • 23. Paul GAUGUIN, Vision after the Sermon, 1888 oil on canvas, 28 ¾ × 36 ¼ inches National Gallery of Scotland, Edinburgh Painters like Paul Gauguin depict the white bonnets of faithful worshipers as a mosaic of white shapes against a surprising red background. A tree branch twists across the canvas, creating curious spatial effects that suggest a spiritual world may be closer than we think.
  • 24. Paul Cézanne, Gulf of Marseilles seen from L’Estaque, c.1885, oil on canvas, 31.5 × 39.2 in
  • 25. Paul Cézanne, Gulf of Marseilles seen from L’Estaque, c.1885, oil on canvas, 31.5 × 39.2 in In contrast, Cézanne sees the French landscape as in terms of earthy geometric solids, bringing a new sense of structure and solidity to the bright French landscape.
  • 26. Paul Cézanne, Mont St. Victoire seen from Bellevue, c. 1885, 37.5 × 51.3 inches) Barnes Foundation
  • 27. Paul Cézanne, Mont Sainte-Victoire and Château Noir, 1904-6, oil on canvas, 25.8 × 31.9 inches
  • 28. Picasso, Portrait of Wilhelm Uhde, 1910 Catalan artist Pablo PICASSO had no difficulty painting representational pictures, abstractions, and everything in between. Here he fragments the portrait of one of his art dealers into rectangles and triangles. Over time he will oscillate back and forth between styles in a seemingly effortless manner.
  • 29. Picasso, Still Life with Chair Caning, 1912
  • 30. Pablo PICASSO, Still Life with Chair Caning, 1912 For this collage, Picasso used wallpaper that imitated chair caning, and wrapped the whole canvas in real rope. The other portions are painted in imitation of various objects that might be found on a tabletop.
  • 31. Picasso, Bottle of Vieux Marc, Glass, Guitar and Newspaper, 1913, Picasso, Bottle of Vieux Marc, Glass, Guitar and Newspaper, 1913 In collages like this one, Picasso uses a newspaper to represent a newspaper, and cut and pasted paper to represent the guitar, glass, and bottle.
  • 32. Duchamp, Nude Descending a Staircase, 1912 Duchamp, Bottle Rack, 1914
  • 33. Marcel Duchamp realizes that the dynamic forms that interest him can be found in actual objects just as well as in painting. The bottle rack on the left was a common object in French life, used for drying out empty wine bottles before reusing them.
  • 34. Duchamp, Tu M’, 1918 This painting of Duchamp's plays with illusion and reality, including a found object that sticks directly out of the painting. The question Duchamp asks here: why paint a representation of the object if you could just use the real thing?
  • 35. Duchamp, L.H.O.O.Q., 1919 Duchamp, Rotary Demisphere (Precision Optics), 1925
  • 36. Duchamp, Rotary Demisphere (Precision Optics), 1925 Duchamp creates his own "moving pictures" in this work. The machine gets plugged in and a series of different plates can be selected.
  • 37. Duchamp's last work is located behind a closed door, with only a peephole allowing viewers to look inside.
  • 38. This is what you see through the peephole. Now the viewer's real body—and their desire to see the work—is brought into the realm of art, further conflating the represented and the real.
  • 39. Marcel DUCHAMP Fountain 1917/1964 glazed ceramic, paint 15 x 19 1/4 x 24 5/8 inches Can "art" be nothing more than a framing device to get us to look at reality differently?
  • 40. René Magritte, The Treachery of Images, 1928-9 In his own way, Belgian artist René Magritte asks a similar question, declaring that a painting of a pipe can never be a real pipe.
  • 41. Artists begin to feel a great freedom to use paint in different ways, or even to forget about painting and use pictures clipped from magazines to express their ideas. There are many different ways to put a recognizable figure together, and artists are drawn to the challenge of finding new methods rather than relying on the old ones.
  • 42. Ferdinand Léger Woman with a Cat, 1921 Hannah Höch, The Beautiful Girl, 1920
  • 43. Fernand LÉGER, The Red Table, 1920. AIC While some artists experiment with different ways of breaking down a scene and putting it back together, others question the need for a subject altogether. Why not just paint colors and shapes, for their own intrinsic appeal?
  • 44. Wassily KANDINSKY, Composition IV 1911 Oil on canvas, 62 7/8 x 98 5/8 inches
  • 46. Paul KLEE, Castle and Sun, 1928
  • 47. “There is no such thing as ‘abstract,’ or ‘concrete’… There is a good picture and a bad picture. There is the picture that moves you and the picture that leaves you cold… A picture has a value in itself, like a musical score, like a poem.” —Fernand Léger Here French artist Léger tries to explain that it doesn’t really matter whether a picture has a subject matter.
  • 48. Frantisek KUPKA, Self Portrait (The Yellow Scale) 1907 Sometimes the same artist will move back and forth between representational and abstract modes of painting.
  • 49. Frantisek KUPKA Red and Blue Discs 1911 39 3/8 x 28 ¾" inches
  • 50. Beat the Whites with the Red Wedge, painted signboard, 1919
  • 51. El Lissitzky, Proun Room, 1923
  • 52. El Lissitzky The New Man, from a portfolio of 10 lithographs, published 1923 As it turns out the abstract language of color and shape can transform back in recognizable human forms.
  • 53. Grosz and Heartfield Dada Picture c. 1919 collage
  • 54. Raoul HAUSSMAN Mechanical Head (Spirit of Our Time) 1920 And assemblages of found objects can produce a recognizably human head.
  • 55. First International Dada Fair, Berlin, June 1920, with participating artists
  • 56. John Heartfield Those Who Read Bourgeois Newspapers Become Deaf and Dumb 1930
  • 57. John Heartfield Adolf, the Superman, Swallows Gold and Spouts Junk 1932 John Heartfield uses found images from published photographs, cuts and pastes them back together to create figurative images with a political edge.
  • 59. In Dada works like this one, and Surrealist works as in the next 2 examples, there is an interplay between the "real" and the represented, as found objects and images are embedded into the work. Kurt SCHWITTERS Merz 32A (Cherry Picture), 1921 collage of colored papers, fabrics, printed labels and pictures, pieces of wood, etc., and gouache on cardboard background 36-1/8 x 27-3/4 inches
  • 60. Max Ernst (French, born Germany. 1891-1976) Two Children Are Threatened by a Nightingale (Deux enfants sont menacés par un rossignol), 1924. © The Museum of Modern Art, New York
  • 62. Salvador DALI, Lobster Telephone, 1936 “I do not understand why, when I ask for a grilled lobster in a restaurant, I am never served a cooked telephone; I do not understand why champagne is always chilled and why on the other hand telephones, which are habitually so frightfully warm and disagreeably sticky to the touch, are not also put in silver buckets with crushed ice around them.”
  • 63. Meret Oppenheim Object, 1936 Fur-covered cup, saucer, and spoon © 2014 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / Pro Litteris, Zurich
  • 64. Arshile GORKY The Artist and His Mother c. 1926-36 Some surrealists, like Arshile Gorky, move between more representational works, like this portrait of the artist with his mother...
  • 65. Arshile GORKY (American, born Armenia. 1904-1948) Garden in Sochi c. 1943. and more abstract ones, like this evocation of his lost childhood, now that he is in exile.
  • 66. I don’t like that word, “finish.” When something is finished, that means it’s dead, doesn’t it? I believe in everlastingness. I never finish a painting—I just stop working on it for a while. —Arshile Gorky, 1948 Gorky has an enormous influence on Willem de Kooning, who becomes a premier American abstract painter.
  • 67. Willem de Kooning (American, b. The Netherlands, 1904-1997). Woman, I, 1950-52 Oil on canvas 75 7/8 x 58 inches
  • 68. Willem de KOONING Two Women at the Beach 1953
  • 69. “…if you pick up some paint with your brush and make somebody's nose with it, this is rather ridiculous when you think of it, theoretically or philosophically. It's really absurd to make an image, like a human image, with paint, today, when you think about it, since we have this problem of doing it or not doing it. But then all of a sudden it was even more absurd not to do it. So I fear I have to follow my desires.” —Willem de Kooning, in a 1962 radio interview Born in Holland, emigrated to the US Well-known abstract painter, active 1940s-80s As de Kooning points out, it's somewhat absurd to make paintings, whether they are figural OR abstract. He never makes a concrete decision, alternating between both modes of making at different times in his career and even in the same painting.

Editor's Notes

  1. Beat the Whites with the Red Wedge, 1919
  2. Creator: George Grosz (German graphic designer, 1893-1959); John Heartfield (German graphic designer, 1891 - 1968 ) Title: Dada Picture Work Type: collage, decollage Work Type: collages; photocollages Date: ca. 1919 Material: photomontage, collage, ink on paper Technique: collage Measurements: height: 37 cm Style Period: Twentieth and Twenty-first Centuries Repository: Kunsthaus Zurich, Zurich, Zurich, Switzerland Collection: Minneapolis College of Art and Design Collection ID Number: Accession: 13391 Source: Image and catalog data provided by Allan T. Kohl, Minneapolis College of Art and Design Rights: Art © [insert name of artist or, if deceased, "Estate of" and name of artist] / Licensed by VAGA, New York, NY
  3. Title: First International Dada Fair Date: 1920 Description: Berlin: June 1920 Description: From left to right: Raoul Hausmann, Hannah Hoch, Otto Burchard, Johannes Baader, Wieland and Margarete Herzfelde, Otto Schmalhausen, George Grosz and John Heartfield Subject: Baader, Johannes, 1875-1955 Subject: Grosz, George, 1893-1959 Subject: Hausmann, Raoul, 1886-1971 Subject: Heartfield, John, 1891-1968 Subject: Höch, Hannah, 1889- Subject: Art Doc. Ref.: Movements Subject: Dada Subject: Exhibitions Subject: Satire Collection: ARTstor Slide Gallery Source: Data from: University of California, San Diego
  4. Creator: Heartfield, John, 1891-1968 Creator: Title: Those Who Read Bourgeois Newspapers Become Deaf and Dumb Date: 1930 Material: photomontage Subject: Newspapers Subject: Photography--20th C. A.D Collection: ARTstor Slide Gallery Source: Data from: University of California, San Diego Rights: © 2007 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VGBK, Bonn
  5. Creator: Heartfield, John, 1891-1968 Creator: Title: Adolf, the Superman, Swallows Gold & Spouts Junk Date: 1932 Material: photomontage Subject: Photography--20th C. A.D Collection: ARTstor Slide Gallery Source: Data from: University of California, San Diego Rights: © 2007 Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / VGBK, Bonn
  6. Creator: Hannah Höch (German , 1889 - 1979 ) Title: Bourgeois Wedding Couple (Quarrel) Work Type: collage, decollage Work Type: collages; photocollages Date: 1919 Material: photomontage Technique: collage Measurements: height: 38 cm Measurements: width: 30.6 cm Style Period: Twentieth and Twenty-first Centuries Description: Private Collection Collection: Minneapolis College of Art and Design Collection ID Number: Accession: 15240 Source: Image and catalog data provided by Allan T. Kohl, Minneapolis College of Art and Design Rights: Please note that if this image is under copyright, you may need to contact one or more copyright owners for any use that is not permitted under the ARTstor Terms and Conditions of Use or not otherwise permitted by law. While ARTstor tries to update contact information, it cannot guarantee that such information is always accurate. Determining whether those permissions are necessary, and obtaining such permissions, is your sole responsibility.