Tracing Lineage: Abstraction and its Aftermath
What does it mean to explore abstraction in the aftermath of Abstract Expressionism? From its heyday in the 1940s and 鈥50s, abstract art gained momentum in the postwar United States and remains a touchstone for artists working today. Tracing Lineage: Abstraction and its Aftermath addresses key art-historical movements, including Abstract Expressionism and its various permutations鈥攆rom Action Painting and Color Field to Minimalism and Postminimalism鈥攚hile also showcasing work by contemporary artists whose investigations of color, form, and material elucidate the ongoing legacies of painterly abstraction.
Drawn from the Museum鈥檚 holdings and augmented by key loans from private collections, Tracing Lineagebrings together nearly twenty-five paintings, sculptures, and mixed-media works by artists working from the late 1950s to the present day. The exhibition explores concurrent and overlapping themes, including gesture, process, geometry, and materiality. The works on display include the boldly gestural canvases of Elaine de Kooning and Ed Clark; the lyrical, color-based abstractions of Helen Frankenthaler and Kenneth Victor Young; the process-oriented art of Diana Al-Hadid, Lynda Benglis, and Hugo McCloud; the geometric abstractions of Sol LeWitt and Stanley Whitney; and the expansive and often unconventional materials used by Anthony Akinbola, George Morrison, Joan Snyder, and Robert Rauschenberg.
As the title suggests, the concept of artistic lineage is paramount throughout this exhibition. Focused groupings of objects highlight formal affinities and personal relationships among contemporaries such as Ralph Iwamoto and LeWitt, McArthur Binion and Whitney, and Louise Nevelson and Morrison while also drawing out connections between a younger generation of abstractionists and the predecessors who influenced them. Abstraction has expanded considerably since the mid-twentieth century to more overtly embrace personal narratives and expressions of identity, including gender, sexuality, and race. This intergenerational narrative is a testament to the ongoing urgency and vital possibilities of abstraction today.
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What does it mean to explore abstraction in the aftermath of Abstract Expressionism? From its heyday in the 1940s and 鈥50s, abstract art gained momentum in the postwar United States and remains a touchstone for artists working today. Tracing Lineage: Abstraction and its Aftermath addresses key art-historical movements, including Abstract Expressionism and its various permutations鈥攆rom Action Painting and Color Field to Minimalism and Postminimalism鈥攚hile also showcasing work by contemporary artists whose investigations of color, form, and material elucidate the ongoing legacies of painterly abstraction.
Drawn from the Museum鈥檚 holdings and augmented by key loans from private collections, Tracing Lineagebrings together nearly twenty-five paintings, sculptures, and mixed-media works by artists working from the late 1950s to the present day. The exhibition explores concurrent and overlapping themes, including gesture, process, geometry, and materiality. The works on display include the boldly gestural canvases of Elaine de Kooning and Ed Clark; the lyrical, color-based abstractions of Helen Frankenthaler and Kenneth Victor Young; the process-oriented art of Diana Al-Hadid, Lynda Benglis, and Hugo McCloud; the geometric abstractions of Sol LeWitt and Stanley Whitney; and the expansive and often unconventional materials used by Anthony Akinbola, George Morrison, Joan Snyder, and Robert Rauschenberg.
As the title suggests, the concept of artistic lineage is paramount throughout this exhibition. Focused groupings of objects highlight formal affinities and personal relationships among contemporaries such as Ralph Iwamoto and LeWitt, McArthur Binion and Whitney, and Louise Nevelson and Morrison while also drawing out connections between a younger generation of abstractionists and the predecessors who influenced them. Abstraction has expanded considerably since the mid-twentieth century to more overtly embrace personal narratives and expressions of identity, including gender, sexuality, and race. This intergenerational narrative is a testament to the ongoing urgency and vital possibilities of abstraction today.
Artists on show
- Anthony Akinbola
- Diana Al-Hadid
- Ed Clark
- Elaine de Kooning
- George Morrison
- George Morrison
- Harmony Hammond
- Helen Frankenthaler
- Hugo McCloud
- Joan Snyder
- Joan Thompson
- Kenneth Victor Young
- Louise Nevelson
- Lynda Benglis
- McArthur Binion
- Mildred Thompson
- Pat Steir
- Ralph Iwamoto
- Rashid Johnson
- Robert Rauschenberg
- Ron Gorchov
- Sol LeWitt
- Stanley Whitney
- Theodoros Stamos
- Torkwase Dyson
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What does it mean to explore abstraction in the aftermath of Abstract Expressionism? From its heyday in the 1940s and 鈥50s, abstract art gained momentum in the postwar United States and remains a touchstone for artists working today.