Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Apr 6, 2024 · Kenneth Noland (born April 10, 1924, Asheville, N.C., U.S.—died Jan. 5, 2010, Port Clyde, Maine) was an American painter of the Abstract Expressionist school. He was one of the first to use the technique of staining the canvas with thinned paints and of deploying his colours in concentric rings and parallels, shaped and proportioned in ...

  2. www.artnet.com › artists › kenneth-nolandKenneth Noland | Artnet

    View Kenneth Nolands 1,406 artworks on artnet. Find an in-depth biography, exhibitions, original artworks for sale, the latest news, and sold auction prices. See available paintings, prints and multiples, and works on paper for sale and learn about the artist.

  3. Active in. South Salem, New York, United States. Nationalities. American. Biography. Kenneth Noland studied at Black Mountain College in North Carolina, a school that encouraged experimental art. Well into the 1950s, the college supported artists of all kinds, from painters who wanted to dance to musicians who wanted to sculpt.

  4. Kenneth Noland (April 10, 1924 – January 5, 2010) was an American painter. He was one of the best-known American color field painters, although in the 1950s he was thought of as an abstract expressionist and in the early 1960s as a minimalist painter.

  5. Kenneth Noland was a primary force in the development of postwar abstract art and color field painting. He attended Black Mountain College in the late forties, exhibiting an early interest in the emotional effects of color and geometric forms.

  6. Jan 6, 2010 · Kenneth Noland, the abstract artist whose sensitive approach to color helped define and establish the Washington Color Field school of painting, died Tuesday at the age of 85 at his home in...

  7. Jan 7, 2010 · American art lost one of its finest painters on Tuesday: Kenneth Noland died at age 85 at his home in Maine. A native of North Carolina, much of Noland's work was part of the Color Field school, a movement that emerged from Abstract Expressionism in the United States in the 1950s.

  1. People also search for