In drawings done as a student, we can see Schönebeck developing his form, from pleasant landscape - based pen marks to abstract fields - edgier riffs
on Tachisme, the then - popular European version of Ab - Ex.
Not exact matches
Critics often compare Gutai to another overseas take
on abstraction and action painting,
Tachisme in France, but its parallels and processes range more widely.
Castellani also disliked Abstract Expressionism (and its European variant,
Tachisme)
on the grounds that it was too closely bound up with subjective gesture and a painter's emotional state.
MODERN ART Pre-Raphaelites (1848
on) Impressionistm (1870s
on) Neo-Impressionism (1870s) Newlyn School (1880s) Art Nouveau (Late 19th C) Symbolism (Late 19th C) Post Impressionism (c. 1880s) Les Fauves (1898 - 1908) Expressionist Art (1900
on) Die Brucke (1905 - 11) Der Blaue Reiter (1911 - 14) Ashcan School (1892 - 1919) Cubism (1908 - 1920) Orphism (1912 - 16) Purism (1920s) Precisionism (1920s
on) Collage (1912
on) Futurism (1909 - 1914) Rayonism (1910 - 20) Suprematism (1913 - 1920s) Constructivism (1917 - 21) Vorticism (1913 - 15) Dada Movement (1916 - 1924) De Stijl (1917 - 31) Bauhaus School (1919 - 1933) Neo-Plasticism (1920 - 40) Art Deco (1920s, 30s) Ecole de Paris (1900
on) Neue Sachlichkeit (1920s) Surrealism (1924
on) Magic Realism (1920s) Entartete Kunst (1930s) Social Realism (1920s, 30s) Socialist Realism (1929
on) St Ives School (1930s
on) Neo-Romanticism: from 1930s Organic Abstraction (1940 - 65) Existential Art (1940s, 50s) Abstract Expressionism (c.1944 - 64) Art Informel (c.1946 - 60)
Tachisme (1940s, 50s) Arte Nucleare (1951 - 60) Kitchen Sink Art (mid-1950s) Assemblage (1953
on) Neo-Dada (1950s
on) Op - Art (Optical Art)(1960s) Pop Art (1958 - 72) New Realism (1960s) Post-Painterly Abstraction (1960s) Feminist Art (1960s
on)
«Between
Tachisme and Abstract Expressionism: Bluhm, Francis, Jenkins» will be
on view at the gallery's Chelsea location from October 5 to November 10, 2017.
Popular during the late 1940s and 1950s, this style of abstract art is part of (and to this extent synonymous with) the broader movement of Art Informel: the only difference is that
Tachisme is focused exclusively
on the type of expressive gesture used by the artist.