Abstract Painting
Assignment ART 130
Stevenson, professor
At home: Due Wednesday, November 28
In class: Final crit
Abstract Painting
The making of a successful abstract painting is not as much
creating or making a painting as it is finding
it. A successful abstract painting is
said to be resolved. The process of resolving a painting can be
unexpectedly quick, or excruciatingly slow.
It demands brutal self honesty and patience, and it cannot be
crammed. An abstract painting has a mind
of its own that must be coaxed, not forced.
For a painting to be resolved, EVERY element of it must mesh and balance
well with EVERY OTHER element. It must
simply work.
Decide on the elements of painting that you are interested
in—Color? Line? Shape? Ab-ex spontaneous marks? Minimalist hard edged
marks? Something else?
You are to make two (2) abstract paintings: one that we will
work on in class, and one that you will work on at home by yourself. Build formal compositions that are not
recognizable as any specific subjects, but that utilize the elements of
painting in which you are interested. Simply make paintings that are resolved AND
that you like the way they look.
In –Class painting: you are to embrace the process and
aesthetic of the Ab-Ex (Abstract Expressionist) action painters. You are to use thick, spontaneous,
“passionate” brush marks that resolve into a balanced, heavily worked
painting. Let the painting dictate each
move.
At-Home painting: you are to embrace the minimalist
aesthetic and design a hard-edged abstract painting. This painting will necessarily be much more
planned out. The paint surface will
probably be much less layered and heavily worked. You are to resolve the painting just like the
in class one, but it will demand a lot more designing on your part. DO NOT simply settle for the first solution
that comes to mind. Instead, find the
best one.
Look at Modern and Contemporary Masters who painted abstractly:
Jackson Pollack, Willem de Kooning, Hans Hoffmann, Brice Marden, Cy Twombley,
Helen Frankenthaler, Franz Kline, Robert Motherwell, and one of my personal
favorites, Richard Diebenkorn. Remember
that honesty is most important. A
painting either works or it doesn’t.
Keep working on your painting until it is resolved. Don’t call it
finished if it’s not. No matter how much you might want an apple to be an
orange, it’s still an apple.
Hints
Experiment. Embrace
accidents. An abstract painter might
have no idea what the final result will look like. Try not to have an image in your head that
you’re working toward. Instead, let the
painting decide what needs to happen next.
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