Jackson Pollock observed, "The modern painter cannot express his age, the airplane, the atom bomb, the radio, in the old forms of the Renaissance or any other past culture. Each age finds its own technique." Choose three works of mid-twentieth century art that illustrate this idea and discuss them in detail. How does the technique of these particular works help convey the reality of the modern world?
Jackson Pollock was indeed correct when he expressed such a notion. The experiences, thoughts and ideas of the modern painter simply cannot be captured via the old forms of the Renaissance or some other antiquated culture or generation. Each generation does in fact find its own technique because its absolutely necessary to do so. There is no other way possible. One can examine three arbitrary works from nearly any decade and find this to be remarkably true, particularly perhaps in the mid-twentieth century art.
For example, the painting, "Sailors and Floosies" by Paul Cadmus presented in 1938, helps to represent the unique experience of what it went to be a young man, working for the Navy in pre-World War II America. In this painting, the artist Paul Cadmus creates a truly unique relationship with the graffiti depicted within the memorial represented on the canvas, allowing it to stretch out and bear its mark on the exterior frame. Thus the painting is both a depiction of a memorial with graffiti on it, and a memorial in and of itself that has been vandalized: it is both vandalism and the object of vandalism. In creating this unique relationship with the idea of vandalism, the painting is also an expressing what it means to be "trashed and disrespected" through the contents and subject matter of the painting. In this subject, the elements of the painting, the soldiers are "trashed" in a way: together with the floozies of the painting they are indeed the trash and the object of trashing, sort of like living litter, as the men are passed out along the canvas, drunk and useless. This demonstrates Cadmus' unique perception and experience of the military and of government military officers: not depicting these men in glory or honor, the artist portrays the unique experience of seeing these men dishonored to a certain extent.
Furthermore, there's a certain amount of failed heterosexuality portrayed in this painting: the amorous situations await them, the women are dubbed as floozies, yet no sex is had by anyone. The soldiers are unable to perform, or perhaps unwilling, which demonstrates a certain unified denial of sex by the three of them. This unification of a refusal to participate in sex means that a certain degree of latent homosexuality is alluded to. While this upset critics at the time, along with the elements that they dubbed as tawdry, unpatriotic and shocking, these elements represented the unique experience of citizens and sailors at the time. On the eve of World War Two, little...
For Pollock, the expression of his style was directed by "some type of mysterious, psychic force which seemed to take control of his hands and feet" 12 which may explain why some people have viewed his paintings as being accidental in nature, meaning that Pollock applied the paint without any sense of pattern or structure. This view is patently wrong, for after studying any of Pollock's paintings, it becomes clear
"When I am in my painting, I'm not aware of what I'm doing. It is only after a sort of "get acquainted" period that I see what I have been about. I have no fears about making changes, destroying the image, etc., because the painting has a life of its own. I try to let it come through." (Jackson Pollock) Using this method he produced beautiful canvases with interlocking and
Convergence" by Jackson Pollock -- Jack the Dripper's masterpiece of technique and meaning Although abstract impressionism often causes viewers to sneer that they too could do 'that,' in other words, abstractly scatter paint on a canvas, the deliberation of design and the ideas behind the 1952 work of "Convergence" by the mature Jackson Pollock suggests otherwise. When one gazes at the massive canvas, something beyond mere painterly splattering is clearly
Legacy of Jackson Pollock The artist Jackson Pollock was renowned for using non-traditional methods to create very untraditional pieces of art. At the time that he was working and up to the modern historical moment, many people look at a piece by Pollock and do not see it as art. Instead, they may likely proclaim that it is just lines or random colors on a canvas and thus does not
Prime Minister briefing " Should U.S. support European unification? "Dwight D. Elsenhower 1957 Since Jackson Pollock painted in a number of different styles and genres during his lifetime, it is with some difficulty that one can identify his aims and goals. During his career which began in earnest during the 1930's and spanned until his death in the 1960's, Pollock produced works that were indicative of cubism, surrealism, and abstract expressionism.
20th Century Modern Art An Analysis of Three Works of Mid-20th Century Modern Art Wassily Kandinsky helped open up the door to abstract art with his book Concerning the Spiritual in Art. A lawyer by trade and a latecomer to the art world, Kandinsky made art that was an expression of the "spiritual" side of life: an abstract representation of the world beneath the world. Kandinsky's works were everything modern art wanted to
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