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Lyrical abstraction

Lyrical abstraction is either of two related but distinct trends in Post-war Modernist painting:

Main articles: Tachisme, Art Informel, and School of Paris

European Abstraction Lyrique born in Paris, the French art critic Jean José Marchand being credited with coining its name in 1947, considered as a component of Tachisme when the name of this movement was coined in 1951 by Pierre Guéguen and Charles Estienne the author of L'Art à Paris 1945–1966, and American Lyrical Abstraction a movement described by Larry Aldrich (the founder of the Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield Connecticut) in 1969.[2][3]


A second definition is the usage as a descriptive term. It is a descriptive term characterizing a type of abstract painting related to Abstract Expressionism; in use since the 1940s. Many well known abstract expressionist painters such as Arshile Gorky seen in context have been characterized as doing a type of painting described as lyrical abstraction.[4][5][6]

Origin[edit]

The original common use refers to the tendency attributed to paintings in Europe during the post-1945 period and as a way of describing several artists (mostly in France) with painters like Wols, Gérard Schneider and Hans Hartung from Germany or Georges Mathieu, etc., whose works related to characteristics of contemporary American abstract expressionism. At the time (late 1940s), Paul Jenkins, Norman Bluhm, Sam Francis, Jules Olitski, Joan Mitchell, Ellsworth Kelly, and numerous other American artists were, as well, living and working in Paris and other European cities. With the exception of Kelly, all of those artists developed their versions of painterly abstraction that has been characterized at times as lyrical abstraction, tachisme, color field, Nuagisme and abstract expressionism.


The art movement Abstraction lyrique was born in Paris after the war. At that time, the artistic life in Paris, which had been devastated by the Occupation and Collaboration, resumed with numerous artists exhibited again as soon as the Liberation of Paris in mid-1944. According to the new abstraction forms that characterised some artists, the movement was named by the art critic, Jean José Marchand, and the painter, Georges Mathieu, in 1947. Some art critics also looked at this movement as an attempt to restore the image of artistic Paris, which had held the rank of capital of the arts until the war. Lyrical abstraction also represented a competition between the School of Paris and the new New York School of Abstract Expressionism painting represented above all since 1946 by Jackson Pollock, then Willem de Kooning or Mark Rothko, which were also promoted by the American authorities from the early 1950s.


Lyrical abstraction was opposed not only to the Cubist and Surrealist movements that preceded it, but also to geometric abstraction (or "cold abstraction"). Lyrical abstraction was, in some ways, the first to apply the lessons of Wassily Kandinsky, considered one of the fathers of abstraction. For the artists, lyrical abstraction represented an opening to personal expression.


Finally, in the late 1960s (partially as a response to minimal art, and the dogmatic interpretations by some to Greenbergian and Juddian formalism), many painters re-introduced painterly options into their works and the Whitney Museum and several other museums and institutions at the time formally named and identified the movement and uncompromising return to painterly abstraction as 'lyrical abstraction'.

Abstract expressionism

Color field painting

Hard-edge painting

Post-painterly abstraction

Tachisme

COBRA (avant-garde movement)

Formalism (art)

Western painting

History of painting

Orphism (art)

Nuagisme

Landfield, Ronnie, , In The Late Sixties, 1993–95, and other writings – various published and unpublished essays, reviews, lectures, statements and brief descriptives at [5].

Lyrical Abstraction

Robbins, Daniel. Larry Poons: Creation of the Complex Surface, Exhibition Catalogue, Salander/O'Reilly Galleries, pp. 9–19, 1990.

Zinsser, John. Larry Poons, an interview reprinted from Journal of Contemporary Art, Fall/Winter 1989, vol.2.2 pp. 28–38. Exhibition Catalogue, Salander/O'Reilly Galleries, pp. 20–24, 1990.

. New Abstract Painting: A Variety of Feelings, Exhibition review, "Continuing Abstraction ", The Whitney Downtown Branch, 55 Water St. NYC. The New York Times, October 13, 1974.

Peter Schjeldahl

Carmean, E.A. Toward Color and Field, Exhibition Catalogue, Houston Museum of Fine Arts, 1971.

Henning, Edward B. Color & Field, Art International May 1971: 46–50.

Tucker, Marcia. The Structure of Color, New York: , NYC, 1971.

Whitney Museum of American Art

Ratcliff, Carter. Painterly vs. Painted, Art News Annual XXXVII, , and John Ashberry, eds.1971, pp..129–147.

Thomas B. Hess

Stephen Prokopoff. Two Generations of Color Painting, Exhibition Catalogue, Philadelphia Institute of Contemporary Art, 1971.

[1]

Lyrical Abstraction, Exhibition Catalogue, , NYC, 1971.

Whitney Museum of American Art

Sharp, Willoughby. Points of View, A taped conversation with four painters," , Brice Marden, Larry Poons and John Walker (painter), Arts, v. 45, n.3. December 1970, pp. 41–.

Ronnie Landfield

Lyrical Abstraction, Exhibition Catalogue, the , Ridgefield, Conn. 1970.

Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum

Domingo, Willis. Color Abstractionism: A Survey of Recent American Painting, Arts, v. 45.n.3, December 1970, pp. 34–40.

Channin, Richard. New Directions in Painterly Abstraction, Art International, Sept. 1970; pp. 62–64.

Davis, Douglas. The New Color Painters, 4 May 1970: pp. 84–85.

Newsweek

Ashton, Dore. Young Abstract Painters: Right On! Arts v. 44, n. 4, February, 1970, pp. 31–35.

Aldrich, Larry. Young Lyrical Painters, , v.57, n6, November–December 1969, pp. 104–113.

Art in America

Ratcliff, Carter. The New Informalists, Art News, v. 68, n. 8, December 1969, p. 72.

Davis, Douglas M. This Is the Loose-Paint Generation, The National Observer 4 Aug. 1969: p. 20

Martin, Ann Ray, and Howard Junker. The New Art: It's Way, Way Out, 29 July 1968: pp. 3,55–63.

Newsweek

L'Envolée Lyrique ("Lyrical Flight"), Paris 1945–1956, texts Patrick-Gilles Persin, Michel and Pierre Descargues Ragon, Musée du Luxembourg, Paris and Skira, Milan, 2006, 280 p. (  88-7624-679-7 ).

ISBN

Gérard Xuriguera. Les Années 50, Arted, Paris, 1984.

Dora Vallier. L'Art Abstrait, Livre de Poche, Paris, 1980.

Michel Ragon et Michel Seuphor. L'art abstrait, (volume 4: 1945–1970), , Paris, 1974.

Maeght

https://web.archive.org/web/20121020093645/http://www.abstract-art.com/abstraction/l5_wordings_fldr/l1_lyr_abst_proposal.html

https://web.archive.org/web/20120915134250/http://www.abstract-art.com/

http://www.artinsight.com/lyrical_abstraction.html

(Seery)

http://www.nga.gov.au/International/Catalogue/Detail.cfm?IRN=36016&BioArtistIRN=18438&MnuID=SRCH&GalID=ALL

(Young)

http://www.nga.gov.au/International/Catalogue/Detail.cfm?IRN=36943&BioArtistIRN=22094&MnuID=2&GalID=1

(Budd)

http://www.nga.gov.au/International/Catalogue/Detail.cfm?IRN=112933&BioArtistIRN=14089&MnuID=SRCH&GalID=1

(James Brooks)

James Brooks: My whole tendency has been away from the fast moving line either violent or lyrical..

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