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Burst!

Abstract Painting After 1945


  • T & H Distributed
  • by Daniel Zamani, Heidi Bale Amundsen
The triumph of radical abstraction after 1945 has been linked to notions of freedom, individuality, and a breaking away from the burdensome shackles of the art-historical tradition. Following the Second World War, figurative painting was increasingly seen as an outmoded impasse.

ISBN 9788284620053 | EN | HB
€43,95
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Publisher T & H Distributed
ISBN 9788284620053
Author(s) Daniel Zamani, Heidi Bale Amundsen
Publication date July 2023
Edition Hardback
Dimensions 310 x 230 mm
Pages 168
Language(s) English ed.
Description

The triumph of radical abstraction after 1945 has been linked to notions of freedom, individuality, and a breaking away from the burdensome shackles of the art-historical tradition. Following the Second World War, figurative painting was increasingly seen as an outmoded impasse. Abstraction, on the other hand - considered as bursts of individual freedom - was soon championed as a fitting way of visibly leaving the scars of the past behind and hailed as the reflection of artistic, cultural, moral and social renewal.
Retracing the evolution of Action Painting and Color Field Painting from the mid-1940s to the end of the Cold War, this catalogue uncovers the vibrant transatlantic dialogue that underpinned the simultaneous development of these closely connected sister movements, which had their respective centres in Paris and New York. As the very antithesis of the Soviet Union's Socialist Realism and its dogmatic narrative schemes, Abstract Expressionism and Art Informel both championed abstraction as the universal language of a new, liberal world order - a move which effectively instrumentalised the new painting as a cultural weapon within the Cold War.
Featuring works from Jackson Pollock, Lee Krasner, Mark Rothko, Helen Frankenthaler, and many others both widely lauded and less well-known, Burst! is a richly illustrated and beautifully produced catalogue accompanying The Shape of Freedom, an exhibition that has travelled from Museum Barberini to Albertina Modern and MUNCH.