Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. benefit refugees of the Spanish Civil War. Like everyone else, Pollock came under Guernica’s spell. Later the same year, Picasso’s portable mural returned to New York as the climax of the major Picasso retrospective at The Museum of Modern Art [fig. 4] . Effective July 26, 1943, the Museum accepted the vast painting as a long-term loan.

    • A Legend and Art Titan
    • Biography
    • Painting Style and Influences
    • Drip Paintings
    • Contributions to Art

    Besides his own artistic contributions, there were several factors that together helped to turn Jackson Pollock into an art titan and legend. His macho hard-drinking, photogenic cowboy image was similar to that of rebel movie star James Dean, and the fact that he died in a high-speed single-car crash on an alcoholic binge, with his mistress and ano...

    Pollock’s roots were in the West. He was born in Cody, Wyoming but grew up in Arizona and Chico, California. His father was a farmer, and then a land surveyor for the government. Jackson would accompany his father sometimes on his surveying trips, and it was through these trips that he was exposed to Native American Art which would later influence ...

    Many people assume that they could easily replicate a Jackson Pollock. Sometimes one hears, “My three-year old could do that!” But could they? According to Richard Taylor, who studied Pollock’s work through computer algorithms, the unique shape and musculature of Pollock’s physique contributed to particular movements, marks, and fluidity on the can...

    Pollock is most well known for his “drip period” which lasted between 1947 and 1950 and secured his prominence in art history, and America’s prominence in the world of art. The canvases were either laid on the floor or set against a wall. These paintings were done intuitively, with Pollock responding to each mark and gesture made while channeling t...

    Whether or not you care for his work, Pollock’s contributions to the world of art were enormous. During his lifetime he was constantly taking risks and experimenting and greatly influenced the avant-garde movements that succeeded him. His extreme abstract style, physicality with the act of painting, enormous scale and method of painting, use of lin...

  2. The famous abstract expressionist Jackson Pollock lived here with his brother and sister-in-law in the 1930s while studying at the Art Students League. 46 was Pollock’s lucky number! In 2014, his top-floor apartment sold for $1.46 million and measures 800 sqft.

  3. In the early forties Pollock began to exhibit in New York and quickly became a star at Peggy Guggenheim's gallery, Art of This Century. At the time, Pollock was working in a variety of styles, using thick impasto as well as a rather mannered linear approach.

    • January 28, 1912
    • August 11, 1956
  4. When Pollock arrived in New York Benton and Orozco were just starting their murals at the New School for Social Research (1930–31). Pollock met Orozco through Benton during his first winter in New York, watched both artists at work on their murals and did action posing for figures in his teacher’s work.

  5. People also ask

  6. The first generation of Abstract Expressionism flourished between 1943 and the mid-1950s. The movement effectively shifted the art world’s focus from Europe (specifically Paris) to New York in the postwar years. The paintings were seen widely in traveling exhibitions and through publications.

  1. People also search for