Jackson Pollock

Untitled

ca. 1946

Many American painters, after a decade dominated by realistic art (Regionalism, American scene, Social Realism), turned to abstraction in the 1940s, in search of imagery expressing universal values. The art of Vasily Kandinsky, a pioneer of abstract painting, was well known to Jackon Pollock thanks to the collections of Solomon R. Guggenheim, in whose museum Pollock had briefly worked in 1943. The ‘pressure’ of the blue surround in this busy and intensely worked gouache may derive from Kandinsky.

Not on View

Artist Jackson Pollock
Date ca. 1946
Medium Gouache, pastel, and alkyd enamel paint on paper
Dimensions 58 x 80 cm
Credit line Peggy Guggenheim Collection, Venice (Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation, New York)
Accession 76.2553 PG 147
Collection Peggy Guggenheim Collection
Type Work on paper

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Not on View


Other artworks

Jackson Pollock

Two

1943–45

On view