2011年8月7日星期日

First United Kingdom Exhibition of Drawings by Robert Motherwell to Open in October

Works on Paper, the first ever exhibition dedicated to drawings and paintings on paper by Robert Motherwell (1915-1991) to be held in Britain, will be staged at the Bernard Jacobson Gallery, 6 Cork Street, London W1, from 10 October to 26 November 2011. Taking place twenty years after the artist’s death, it will comprise some ninety works spanning most of his career.

Robert Motherwell was a major figure in the birth and development of Abstract Expressionism and the youngest member of the ‘ New York School ’, a term he coined. His career spanned five decades during which time he created some of the most iconic images of the 20th century. A passionate advocate and articulate spokesman for Abstract Expressionism, he believed that ideas and emotions were best communicated through the bold forms and gestural lines of abstract art. This exhibition will include sixty works from the Lyric Suite, a group of works from the Beside the Sea series and a selection of works based upon James Joyce’s Ulysses as well as an abstract portrait of the poet. A further selection of works from the 1940s to the 1980s includes Elegy and Je t’aime as well as automatism drawings, work from the Drunk with Turpentine, Gesture and the Open series.

Motherwell came from a educated middle-class family and studied literature, psychology and philosophy at Stanford University , California , and philosophy at Harvard. He decided to become an artist after seeing modern French painting on a year-long trip to Europe in 1938-9 but first, to please his father, he studied art history at Columbia University , New York . There, through his tutor Meyer Shapiro, he met the Chilean-born painter Roberto Matta and other Surrealist artists exiled from Europe whose use of ‘automatism’ had a lasting effect on him as well as on other American artists including Jackson Pollock. Motherwell became very close to Pollock and to Mark Rothko, the other two outstanding figures of Abstract Expressionism.

In 1941 Motherwell went to Mexico with Matta and on the boat he met Maria Emilia Ferreira y Moyers, a Mexican actress, who became his first wife. In Mexico , under the influence of Matta and Wolfgang Paalen, Motherwell worked on his Mexican Sketchbook. Using a technique called psychic automatism, he produced images that were a Surrealist mix of the abstract and the semi-representational. This sketchbook and the trip to Mexico led to his first important paintings, works such as Little Spanish Prison, 1941, now in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art .

Motherwell’s first one-man show at Peggy Guggenheim’s Art of This Century Gallery in New York in 1944 included paintings, drawings and collages all with a Spanish or Mexican theme. The Spanish Civil War became a great moral issue that drove his work for some years and for many his defining image is the 140 monumental works entitled Elegy to the Spanish Republic which began with a small ink drawing illustrating a poem by Harold Rosenberg in 1948. He described these works as “a funeral for something one cared about” and continued to paint them up to his death.

In the late 1940s and the 1950s Motherwell spent some time teaching and lecturing, first at Black Mountain College , North Carolina , where he taught and influenced Robert Rauschenberg and Cy Twombly who died recently, and later at Hunter College, New York. In 1944 he initiated the Documents of Modern Art series translating and publishing for the first time many of the important documents of the European avant-garde.

From 1954 to 1958, during the break-up of his second marriage, he worked on a small series of paintings which incorporated the words Je t’aime, expressing his most intimate and private feelings. His collages began to incorporate material from his studio such as cigarette packets and labels becoming records of his daily life. He was married for the third time, from 1958 to 1971, to Helen Frankenthaler, a successful abstract painter. In 1962 they spent the summer at the artists’ colony at Provincetown , Massachusetts , where the coastline inspired the Beside the Sea series of 64 paintings, the oil paint splashed with full force against rag paper imitating the sea crashing on the shore in front of his studio.

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