I had a terrific time with Joan Waltemath, Raphael Rubinstein (who has a new
article about abstract painting underway), Jennifer McCoy, Archie Rand and so many other interesting artists.
Not exact matches
It was also the exhibition that confirmed Richter's status as one of the leading artists in the world, and was described by Storr in his introduction as «long overdue» in the United States.2 In 2003 Richter embarked on a small but substantially sized series of
paintings entitled Silicate [CR: 885/1 -4] inspired by an
article in the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung from 12 March 2003
about the shimmering qualities of certain insects» bodies.3 The resulting four large
paintings are perhaps the most overtly biological of the
abstract works in Richter's oeuvre, suggestive of cell formations and genetic sequences seen under the microscope.
I was reading an
article recently
about Jackson Pollock, an
abstract artist famous for his «drip
paintings,» and I became intrigued when I found out his art falls under the category of «process art.»
Martin is sometimes described as an
abstract painter, and he has written insightfully and humorously
about abstraction here in the Brooklyn Rail, in particular «Everything is Finished Nothing is Dead: An Article About Abstract Painting.&r
about abstraction here in the Brooklyn Rail, in particular «Everything is Finished Nothing is Dead: An
Article About Abstract Painting.&r
About Abstract Painting.»