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  1. Barnett Newman (January 29, 1905 – July 4, 1970) was an American artist. He has been critically regarded as one of the major figures of abstract expressionism , and one of the foremost color field painters.

  2. Barnett Newman (January 29, 1905 – July 4, 1970) was an American artist. He is seen as one of the major figures in abstract expressionism and one of the foremost of the color field painters.

    • American
    • January 29, 1905
    • New York City, New York, United States
    • July 4, 1970
  3. Barnett Newman (January 29, 1905 – July 4, 1970) was an American artist. He has been critically regarded as one of the major figures of abstract expressionism, and one of the foremost color field painters.

    • Introduction
    • Most Important Writings
    • On Abstract Art
    • On Art and Inquiry
    • On Beauty
    • Barnett Newman vs. Ad Reinhardt
    • In Discussion with Hess on Stations of The Cross

    Newman stands out among artists of the New York School for the quantity of writing he produced, particularly in the early to mid 1940s. Discussion and ideas remained important to him, and he likened abstract thought to the non-objective forms of "primitive" art - both, he believed, were aimed at generalization and classification. However, as an art...

    'The First Man Was an Artist' Tiger's Eye October 1947 Newman worked as an associate editor for Tiger's Eye, and 'The First Man Was an Artist' was published in the magazine's first year. In the essay, Newman asserted the priority of the aesthetic over the social: "The human in language is literature," he wrote, "not communication." Humans were arti...

    Newman considered himself a pure artist, working with pure forms. For a 1947 exhibition at Betty Parsons Gallery, entitled The Ideographic Picture, he wrote, "The basis of an aesthetic act is the pure idea. But the pure idea is, of necessity, an aesthetic act." Newman affirmed his belief that authentic, expressive abstract art was void of symbolism...

    For the first issue of Tiger's Eye, in October 1947, Newman wrote one of his most famous essays, 'The First Man Was an Artist'. In it he sought to establish a rather unorthodox link between art and science; "For there is a difference between method and inquiry," he wrote. "Scientific inquiry, from its beginnings, has perpetually asked a single and ...

    According to Newman, all of modern art had been a quest to negate the classical standards of beauty established during the Renaissance. The early Modernists - artists such as Édouard Manet and the Impressionists- had failed to fully achieve this, and the task of completion was left to his own generation. "I believe that here in America," he wrote i...

    In 1956, Ad Reinhardt wrote an article in College Art Journal entitled 'The Artist in Search of an Academy', in which he derided Barnett Newman as "the artist-professor and traveling-design-salesman, the Art-Digest-philosopher-poet and Bauhaus-exerciser, the avant-garde-huckster-handicraftsman and educational-shop-keeper, the holy-roller-explainer-...

    In a public conversation between Thomas B. Hess and Newman, staged at the Guggenheim Museum on May 1, 1966, Newman was asked a series of questions regarding his Stations of the Crossseries (1958-66), which were exhibited at the museum in Newman's very first solo exhibition at a public gallery. "When I call them Stations of the Cross," he said, "I a...

    • American
    • January 29, 1905
    • New York, New York
    • July 4, 1970
  4. Barnett Newman, American painter whose large, austerely reductionist canvases influenced the color-field painters of the 1960s. His notable works include Onement I and Stations of the Cross, the latter of which is a series of 14 paintings. Learn more about Newman’s life and career.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  5. One of the great figures of the abstract expressionist movement, Barnett Newman was an intellectual, developing his ideas in his painting, sculpture, and writing. Born and raised in New York, Newman took classes at the Art Students League while in high school and college.

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  7. Nov 20, 2004 · Barnett Newman was best known for his color-field paintings and use of what he called “zips,” vertical strips of color placed across the surfaces of his compositions. He created the zips by applying masking tape to block off parts of the canvas and painting the exposed areas.

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