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Robert
MOTHERWELL (1915-1991)
"To
end up with a canvas that is no less beautiful than the empty
canvas is to begin with."
In 1940, a young painter named Robert Motherwell came to New
York City and joined a group of artists - including Jackson
Pollock, Willem de Kooning, Mark Rothko and Franz Kline -
who set out to change the face of American painting. These
painters renounced the prevalent American style, believing
its realism depicted only the surface of American life. Their
interest was in exploring the deeper sense of reality beyond
the recognizable image. Influenced by the Surrealists, many
of whom had emigrated from Europe to New York, the Abstract
Expressionists sought to create essential images that revealed
emotional truth and authenticity of feeling.
Robert Motherwell was the youngest and most prolific of the
group. Born in Aberdeen, Washington, in 1915, Motherwell first
hoped to be a philosopher. His studies at Stanford and Harvard
brought him into contact with the great American philosopher
Alfred North Whitehead, who first challenged him with the
notion of abstraction. What he took from Whitehead was the
sense that abstraction was the process of peeling away the
inessential and presenting the necessary. After moving to
New York and becoming acquainted with a number of artists,
Motherwell recognized in them similar desires.
Living in Greenwich Village, he became part of an exciting
group of young artists. Forming a community and living on
what little they had, the Abstract Expressionists made daring
experiments in painting and in the intellectual investigations
surrounding it. Their break with the traditional art conventions
often provoked the harshest criticism from the establishment.
Despite this, these early years were an incredibly productive
period for Motherwell-seeing him experiment in a range of
media, from painting to collage. His work often expressed
the actions of the artist through dramatic and bright brush
strokes. Valued for their energetic imagery, they attempted
a pure emotional response made real in paint. His collage
also concerned itself with an awareness of the presence of
the artist in a work. Using torn paper on minimalist backgrounds,
he created work that was at once discordant and lyrical.
Beyond his individual efforts as an artist, Motherwell played
a major role in the intellectual and artistic development
of the underground New York art world of the time.
Reflecting on those early years, he spoke of their belief
that "if the abstraction, the violence, the humanity
was valid in Abstract Expressionism, then it cut out the ground
from every other kind of painting." It was this revolutionary
sensibility that determined both his life and his art. This
work, however, grew not simply from a desire to present a
new American art form, but a need to express the major human
themes in paint. Like the great masters, Motherwell's importance
can be seen in his attempts at expressing something monumental.
With the advent of Pop Art and its concentration on popular
culture themes, the art public began to long for the idealism
of the Abstract Expressionists. In relation to Andy Warhol's
soup cans, Motherwell's large abstract paintings began to
achieve a majesty in the public eye. Motherwell's politics
and spirituality were welcome reminders of a time when one
could make art that did not engage the cynicism of a post-modern
era. No longer the black sheep of the art world, Motherwell
began to enjoy the fruits of years of dedicated work. It seemed,
however, for many of the Abstract Expressionists that the
newly found appreciation could not counteract the turbulence
of those early years-many dying young or taking their own
lives. Though somewhat alone, Motherwell committed himself
to producing highly experimental work of emotional depth for
the rest of his life. On July 16, 1991, at the age of 76 he
died: the last of the great Abstract Expressionists. From
the 1949 painting, AT FIVE IN THE AFTERNOON, until the end
of his life, Motherwell continued his search for a personal
and political voice in abstraction. This search produced a
body of work that remains a testament to the human soul and
its persistence, and to the genre of abstract painting out
of which it came.
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