Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Curatorial Introduction


The mid to late twentieth century was a period that can be readily described by the works of art being articulated during this time.  With abstract expressionism in full swing and clearly dominating the art world, by the mid 1960’s artists and critics such as Clement Greenberg began to call for something new, a transformation of sorts, away from the painterly, blended and smooth qualities of Abstract expressionism and toward uninterrupted and sharp definitions of contour as well as solid and segmented areas of color with a clear emphasis on linear representation (Greenberg, 1). In 1964 Greenberg was called upon by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art to curate an exhibition dedicated to abstract expressionism, this exhibition ended up being entitled “Post-Painterly Abstraction”, so entitled based on specific qualities that each painting possessed and techniques utilized by specific artists (The Art Story: Post-Painterly Abstraction Movement, 1). Inspired by paintings of Jackson Pollock and his efforts at creating works with “limitless opticality”, Post-Painterly Abstraction artists seemed to yearn for transcendence and realization of the infinite. They abandoned all suggestions of figuration and instead investigated the relevance of the use of color as well as form (Fried, 19).
The following compilation includes forty works demonstrating aspects of Post-Painterly Abstraction by artists who were outwardly involved in the movement. This includes major players such as Kenneth Noland, Jules Olitski, Frank Stella, Mark Rothko, and Ellsworth Kelly, and others whose pieces date from early works in 1958 to much later works in 1998. Each artist played with different aspects of Post Painterly Abstraction, working in styles such as shaped canvas painting, color field painting, hard edge painting, Washington color school painting, etc. in an effort to escape previously held notions and boundaries. Each work demonstrated specific aspects of Post-Painterly Abstraction including, but certainly not limited to, simplified forms, linear designs, contrasts of pure hues of color, blocked areas of color as well as form, and the like.
Color Field painting was a style of much attention for many Post Painterly artists. What the Color Field painters, such as Kenneth Noland, contributed to the movement of Post-Painterly Abstraction was the presentation of a vast field of color that seems so ambiguous and while expansive, one could not even begin to enter. A phrase that has come up multiple times that expresses the objective of these color field painters is their desire to “ravish the eye” while at the same time engage the feelings of the onlooker. These painters further push their idea through the new medium of stained canvas, which fuses the paint with the canvas (Wilkin 47). Noland was inspired by Frankenthaler’s methods and soon broke out into his own unique style which started with bold-colored concentric rings and later explored different geometric shapes. The main objective of Noland in his circular paintings was a sort of optical illusion—to grab the viewer’s attention and draw it into the painting, and also to allow the viewer to question the depth and space the painting occupies.
On the more illusionistic side of Post Painterly Abstraction there existed those artists who decided to paint on a canvas of unorthodox shape. Shaped canvas painting is easily an example of Post-Painterly Abstraction as is clearly demonstrated by its simple fundamentals. Shaped canvas pieces show a direct desire to escape the boundaries that are created by a rectangular shaped canvas’ and demonstrate a clear desire to create a literal representation of shape, instead of just painting form. Artists such as Frank Stella not only used a carved out, angular, and shaped canvas to create new meaning to form and figure, but also utilized new materials such as fluorescent paint that allowed new representation of color, essentially aiding in the creation of a new kind of illusion within the realm of painting emphasizing linear clarity (Colpitt, 54). This use of new and improved technology and supplies within the art world was a common occurrence during this time period and new materials where especially utilized by Post-Painterly Abstraction artists.
Late in 1961, Olitski adopted staining already used by Frankenthaler, Louis and Noland: thin water-based acrylic pigment, which would soak through the unprimed canvas fabric. The images were immediately in a very different, much higher key; color was bright and assertive (Geldzahler, 29). Staining automatically gives a continuous material flatness, but unlike dripping or pouring, it does not dictate any specific kind of figuration. The tendency of the stain painters has been to find a design or layout that presses the illusion still closer to the surface. Noland did this with geometric design, thereby identifying areas of color as closely as possible with the support—which itself is geometric—and reinforcing the effect of staining. This makes the painting pure, sheer surface, and gives the whole a weightless feeling. There is an openness to composition. Like Noland, Olitski favored concentric configurations that nowhere echoed the rectangle’s edges; but while Noland stuck to centered circles, Olitski used concentricity as a way to anchor the whole surface or field (Moffett, 34).
Rothko, Noland, and Olitski executed their art on extremely large canvases. As evident in his Seagram commission, from which he later withdrew, Rothko abhorred the idea of art used as decoration for the rich. He harbored strong feelings against his art being background ornamentation rather than actual art. Using canvases that covered up to an entire wall not only resolved the issue of art as decoration, but also changed the perception and perspective of the viewer. The paintings in the Rothko Chapel are all large in size to emphasize “the installation’s modulation between virtual and actual space” (Nodelman 170). Kenneth Noland’s famous concentric paintings, particularly Askew, are on canvases spanning up to five or six feet. He uses overlapping and gradually diminishing circles to invite the viewer into the painting through a series of optical techniques. The expansive canvas is essential in capturing this awareness. Jules Olitski, like Noland, used Stain painting to make the paint sink into the canvas and give his works a “lush physicality” using large-scale canvases to emphasize the characteristics of the Stain technique (“Revelation: Major Paintings by Jules Olitski”).
The revelation that traditional boundaries are set in order to be crossed is not an idea that was new to the Post-Painterly Abstraction artists. These artists took this idea and utilized it in an effort to create moving and inspirational art works that challenged contemporary values and tradition, not only in style and form, but right down to the very materials used to execute the work. Post-Painterly Abstraction is exemplified by all the above named artists, as well as many more, and is aspects of this movement is seen individually in all of their works.


Artworks, Chronological Order

Ellsworth Kelly, Meschers, 1951


COLOR AND SHAPE: A LOOK AT ELLSWORTH KELLY, BY CAROLYN PORRAS
In 1964 Clement Greenberg coined the title “Post- Painterly Abstraction” for an exhibition where a new style of art was being shown in response to Abstract Expressionism.[1] The most distinct difference to this prior movement was that it was heading towards a new linear clarity rather than a painterly approach. Abstract Expressionism believed in gesture and history within their paintings. [2] In contrast Post- Painterly Abstraction artists believed this layering of gestures showed too much individuality and were determined to create clarity and expansiveness. There were 31 artists included in this exhibition including Frank Stella, Helen Frankenthaler and Ellsworth Kelly. Post- Painterly Abstraction was most known for t use of vibrant colors and thick paint, yet there were several styles under the umbrella of Post- Painterly Abstraction.
Color-field painting was a part of this movement and artists such as Frankenthaler and Rothko participated in it. This sub style practiced large expanses of unmediated color. The hues were painted side by side in order to create a visual and emotional experience.  Louis and Noland were involved in another Post- Painterly style, which was the Washington Color School.[3]  They rejected visible brushstrokes and focused mainly on experiments of color to avoid the visibility of their hand. Hard edge paintings were also an important part of this movement.  One artist in particular showcased how flat colored shapes were used to transform perception and experience.
Ellsworth Kelly was creating during the Post- Painterly Abstraction movement. He was born in Newburgh, New York on May 31, 1923.[4] In 1943 he was inducted into the United States Army, and for his return to the United States he moved to Boston and used his G.I Bill for tuition to attend the School of the Museum of Fine Arts.
His works are known for showcasing his unique way of seeing.  He takes cues from his surroundings and transforms them into flat geometric shapes. Kelly engaged intensely with perception and transforming this experience.[5]  These shapes may seem random and unassociated with our natural surroundings however he drew great inspiration from nature.  It was said by Bernstein that when Kelly observed his drawings from decades ago he would recall the memories associated with making them. His memories of a bird or a beetle teach him about color and shapes that play into his paintings.  Inspiration from nature extended to more than just insects and trees, he was inspired by shapes in architecture, floor tiles, or broken glass. In Diane Waldman’s essay on Ellsworth Kelly’s work she quotes him on his art process
“I like to work from things that I see whether they’re man-made or natural or a combination of the two. Once in a while I work directly from something I’ve seen, like a window, or a fragment of a piece of architecture or someone’s legs; or sometimes the spaces between things, or just how the shadows of an object would look.”
An example of this transformation is his painting Meschers from 1951. Meschers gives that broken glass feel, it was constructed by slicing a drawing into 25 squares and rearranging them at random into a collage that was used as inspiration for this painting. Meschers is 59 x 59 inches[6] and resides in a private collection. This piece is segmented into five blue vertical parts with stark green horizontal lines cutting through them. The colors sit next to each other but it seems like the green is floating atop the blue.  
The title Meschers alludes to a village near the river called Meschers. This makes the viewer come to the conclusion that inspiration was his observation of the water, sky and trees.  Suddenly the fractured blue and greens take on a new meaning and representation. The green shapes recall sharp blades of grass and the blue could be the sky or water along the bank.  Advancing this “reality” by suggesting a new one intrigued Kelly.
This method of working can also be compared to one his collages, Spectrum Colors Arranged by Chance.  This is a series of eight collages that is made up of 1,600 squares. These squares were sourced from reflections of light on the Seine. He used a grid format just as in Meschers and used chanced to place the colors. This causes that fragmentation and abstraction. Both these paintings despite their abstraction resonate with perception and indicators of his transformation of reality.
Kelly developed a process for these collage series. His memory and engagement with his natural surroundings accumulated in his mind to create a stock of images he could rifle through. These images of patterns, colors and negative spaces between buildings were his resources. From then he would paint, or draw with these memories in mind. Since he was recalling his memory the images already transformed from actuality. Continuing his process of abstraction he would then cut the drawings and rearrange them into a new abstract composition with an echo of the reality. Kelly had no system or conditions to which he bound this process he just created through chance.[7]  
“This way of composing was endless and didn’t need ‘me’- they made themselves-it seemed nature worked for me using the laws of chance”[8]
The last step was to enlarge the collages into a flat painting. Or even several paintings that he would then connect. Since there were all these steps into making the works that we all know today, what is left is something completely foreign.
Ellsworth Kelly was a very minimal painter in the time of Post- Painterly abstraction. His goal was like many others before him, which was to perceive reality. But his works such as Mescher proves that he was driven by color and shape in order to display his sense of “reality” and nature.                                                         



Friedel Dzubas, Patmos, 1958



Kenneth Noland, Askew, 1958


KENNETH NOLAND'S ASKEW, BY EVA MOSLEY
                “What sets the best Color Field paintings apart is the extraordinary economy of means with which they manage not only to engage our feelings but also to ravish the eye” (Wilkin 17). These provoking words from Karen Wilkin somewhat epitomizes the subject of Color Field Painting. In this sense, it is meant to directly question what art really is through the bold overlapping colors used in this subgenre of Post Painterly Abstraction. Color Field removes the traditional subject from the painting and transforms color into the subject itself. One of the artists associated with this painting style is Kenneth Noland, an American painter and sculptor who used his G.I. Bill from his service in the US Air Force to study at the Black Mountain College in North Carolina (“Noland” 1). His painting Askew from 1958 proves to be a stunning contribution to the style of Color Field Painting.
                  Noland was very good friends with fellow painter and color field artist Morris Louis, who taught with him at the Black Mountain College. Here they met Helen Frankenthaler. Both Noland and Louis were influenced by Frankenthaler’s staining method and took a trip to New York to visit various galleries where they saw more of her works (Wilkin 31). What Noland chose to focus on and found to be a provocative subject was the circle. He described how “both eyes focus on it. It stamps itself out like a dot. This, in turn, causes one’s vision to spread, as in Tantric art” (Wilkin 40). Askew embodies his fascination with the concentric shape. Having been painted in 1958, Michael Fried, a well-known art critic, after seeing his works, comments on how 1958 was when Noland really broke out into his truly mature style (Fried 60). In size, the painting measures out to be 67 1/8 by 69 inches and is located at the Mitchell-Innes & Nash Museum in New York City.
In this painting, we can see the influence and similarities between Mondrian and Noland. Askew exhibits a clarity that is classic, and the chromatic cessation of the space and how there is a sort of optical illusion that seems to retreat and advance but at the same time is still occupying one plane. This painting pulls your eyes to look towards the center through the contrast of the black in the center and the comparatively lighter colors that fan out from the middle. However, what Noland accomplishes in his paintings, and in Askew in particular, is to “convey a physical sense of space with expressive brushwork, staining, overlapping edges and the illusion of diminishing forms created by concentric bands of color” (Noland and Waldman 11).
 If you compare Askew to his later works you can see how the theme of concentric circles is still clearly present but has taken on a more defined edge. Drawing from Frankenthaler and Pollock, Askew is made by the staining of an unmeasured canvas, which leaves a design on the canvas that seems almost magically placed with no marks left behind through the use of paint brushes. Noland uses Magna paint, which is a brand of paint specifically used for the suspension of the paint in the use of solvents. This allows for the paint to completely fuse with the canvas. The staining process stays true to the minimalist ideal of the artist of the Post-Painterly Abstraction movement—-having as little personal influence on the piece as possible. This feature is one that defines Noland as a color field artist and as a part of the Post-Painterly Abstraction movement. Fried praised Noland’s work as having “succeeded in constructing a color-situation of great optical force” (Fried 62).
In the exhibit in the Mitchell-Innes and Nash Museum, the painting sits on the wall only a few feet above the floor, which leaves the viewer looking straight into the black dot in the center of the painting. The black ring and circle in the center of the painting seem almost sinister in comparison to the lighter outer rings. The painting, being almost six square feet, is pretty large and just stares you right in the face. Also, the contrast of the circular painting with the square frame is aesthetically pleasing. This really plays a trick on the eye, like those optical illusions that pulls the eye into the painting and draws it to the center but also lets the eye expand outward from the center to take in the whole painting of concentric rings that appear to be splattered onto the canvas. When looking at it, it is clear how flat the painting is, but at the same time appears to have depth.
Ultimately, what Noland was trying to convey through Askew was to make the viewer stop and think about what they were looking at. With the bright colors that grab the attention of the onlooker, and the circular shapes drawing them in deeper into the painting. It accomplishes a sort of perfect imperfection with its use of the circular geometric shape, but having it seemingly splotched onto the canvas is really beautiful. Noland’s circular themed paintings are treasures in and of themselves and hold all the passion of the artist who created them. “Noland’s paintings are declarative without being declamatory, lucid but never obvious. They are charged with feeling and possessed of an experiential richness far in excess of their visible means” (Fried 63).





Barnett Newman, Untitled, 1959



Morris Louis, Floral V, 1959-60




Mark Rothko, No. 64 [Untitled], 1960



Mark Rothko, No. 16, 1958



Hans Hofmann, The Gate, 1959-60




Morris Louis, Beta Lambda, 1960






Morris Louis, Alpha, 1960




Kenneth Noland, Earthen Bound, 1960


Willem do Kooning, A Tree in Naples, 1960



Morris Louis, Alpha Epsilon, 1961



Kenneth Noland, Turnsole, 1961




Sam Francis, Blue Balls VII, 1962




Jules Olitski, Cleopatra Flesh, 1962



ON JULES OLITSKI, CLEOPATRA FLESH, BY LESLIE HOWARD
Clement Greenburg has written, “The ultimate effect sought is one of an almost literal openness that embraces and absorbs color in the act of being created by it. Color field has to be uniform in hue, with only the subtlest variations of value if any at all, and spread over an absolutely, not merely relatively, large area.  Size guarantees the purity as well as the intensity needed to suggest indeterminate space: more blue simply being bluer than less blue.”
Olitski’s relevance within Post-painterly Abstraction of Art lies in his yearning for transcendence and the infinite.  He has abandoned all suggestions of figuration and instead has investigated the relevance and exploration of color.  This is especially true in the large field of color within an artwork.  It has avoided the suggestion of form or mass, more concerned with the color as a field.  This artwork is more associated with the works of Hard-Edge Painting due to the autonomous shapes and color field painting.   One does not get the census of gestural abstraction, which instead evokes the stained quality of Cleopatra Flesh.  Hard-edge abstraction involves the departure of expressiveness and gestural abstraction, scene in Olitski’s work.  There is a fullness of color, and clear execution of form along with smooth surface planes.  Olitski may not be as geometric or “hard-edge” as other hard-edge abstraction painters, such as Ellsworth Kelly, Frank Stella, and Kenneth Noland.  Cleopatra Flesh is a characteristic of the hard-edge painting in that its lines are virtually very clean, the areas are recognizably very geometric and it is a flat surface. 
The artwork is between perception and the purely visual character of the thing perceived (Fried, 36).   This visual character is a particular color-situation.   He makes us encounter these colors, making us view them more intensely, by experiencing individual colors, without subject, regardless of form, just color.  The handling of color is crucial to opticality.  Opticality, first and foremost is executed through color, and then followed by medium (Fried, 37). We are able to recognize these colors because they are different from the bare canvas, immediately we notice the higher key of color, the brightness of blue, black and red. 
He uses the technique of staining in which thin pigment was soaked through the canvas fabric, and not lying idly on the surface, in large-scale erratic circular shapes (Moffet, 9).  The stained canvas evokes density and fullness, without thick textural techniques of impasto or dripping of paint onto the canvas.  Dying his canvas with acrylic resin paint yielded the true and original construction of color-situations that he ambitioned.  Staining produced a continuous flatness.  It was through staining that he could create large and pure segments of high-keyed color, uninhibited by exploitative resources.  There was no such figuration for which the colors to become, therefore taking on the purely aesthetic color quality, limited to certain shapes, but not limited to the square.
In Cleopatra Flesh, we are first confronted with the deep, encapsulating blue image.  This oblong blue structure is of circular dimension and nearly encloses the large black circle and smaller red circle.  By constructing colors, he confronts us with three individual colors.  There is a definite tension between them, on the brink of intense confrontation.   Tension was not achieved only through the relationships of the shapes themselves, but through the pressure and counter-pressure exerted by the placement of the circles against one another and the blank background (Millard).  The black and red circles are totally contained within the borders of the composition.  There is nearly no overlapping of colors or shapes.  They are very much individual in color and shape. There are serious tensions in color and spatiation.   It would seem the artwork is organized around a core, but it is not centrally organized. The black and red circles are on the verge of being consumed by blue.  This is intentional.  The colors and contours are played off against one another at extremely close quarters, leaving narrow, pinched oscillating strips of blank canvas between them (Fried, 38).   The colors and shapes retain their individual identities.  The exclusion of overlapping and alignment with the rectilinear frame emphasizes the irregularity of exclusively rounded forms (Moffett, 9).
The circumference of the blue circle exceeds the canvas’ limits.  A flood of color rolls downward from the top right of the canvas, nearly encompasses the black circle, and begins to surround the red circle as well.  This gives a very eccentric and lopsided design in composition, and yet it has achieved a high equilibrium of shapes and colors.  The vastness of the blue circle and monumentality of scale coincides with the enormous canvas.   Also, the logic of stain is much more aligned with opticality than practicality of shape and form.  However, Olitski is still able to maintain control over the body of the shapes, pushing their dimensions to capacity just before they collide.  Each shape is juxtaposed against one another.  Because the blue is ever expanding, but has not been able to attain the two other circles completely, the smaller circles remain freed from the constraints of containment.
The individual color-elements appear to consume their contours (Fried, 38).  The large canvas was a perfect medium to simplify the procedure of his paintings for an aerial pungency to his high-keyed, uninflected colors (Hilton, 57).  The cropping of the canvas resulted in an eccentric and lopsided design.  The top and right side of the blue circle was cutoff, resulting in exclusively rounded forms within a rectangular frame, and no longer organized around a central core.  Olitski drove both the optical and the configuration to extreme limits in this artwork. 
It seems a bit obvious to evoke the characteristic of flatness of surface within Olitski’s painting, although it is one standard of Color-field painting.  It is flat. And yet that is not the immediate focus that one gains from glaring onto its surface.  The immediate evocation is the color, the colors that are immediate in representation: the blue, black and red.  In contrast, in tension with this work is the background canvas, which is such an irrelevant but clear factor in the work.  Literally, it is a hard-edge painting in that the lines are so distinct to form the object, there are unquestionable lines making up the presence of contort.  One sees the field of color, represented quite literally in blue, black and red.  


Kenneth Noland, Drought, 1962

Gene Davis, Untitled, 1962



Howard Mehring, Double Red, 1963




Helen Frankenthaler, Canal, 1963





John Hoyland, 8.8.63


John Ferren, Dance, 1962



Howard Mehring, The Key, 1963




Jack Bush; Red, Green, Brown, 1964




Jules Olitski, Turkey Girl, 1964



Ellsworth Kelly, Red/Blue, 1964



Frank Stella, Fez, 1964



Gene Davis, Black Grey Beat, 1964



Jules Olitski, Shoot, 1965


Josef Albers, Hommage au Carre, 1965



Barnett Newman, Who's Afraid of Red, Yellow, and Blue?, 1966



Frank Stella, Harran II, 1967

FRANK STELLA'S HARRAN II, BY JENN DILLON

Beginning in the early 1950’s, a shift took place within the world of art, mainly within the school of abstract expressionism. Critics and artists alike sought to avoid the painterly, repeated, and empty stylistic devices of some of the new members to the school of abstract expressionism. Out of this desire to escape the painterly, loose definition of contour as well as color, some artists began to react with sharp, uninterrupted, and segmented areas and definition of contour and color. This new motive was described by Clement Greenberg in his essay that accompanied the original exhibition of these works (1). This tendency in art, which seems to have begun in the early 1950’s and extended into the mid 1970’s, and can be referred to as Post-Painterly Abstraction, a term coined by Greenburg in 1964 as the title of an exhibition that he was chosen to curate  at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Post-Painterly abstraction can be better understood as a term that includes a range of, some slightly and some drastically, differing styles including color field painting, hard-edge paining, Washington Color School painting, shaped canvas painting, and the like (2).
          Shaped canvas painting is a technique as well as a style of painting that existed within the realm of Post-Painterly Abstraction. This form of abstraction was readily popular and utilized throughout the 1960’s as what seemed to be a brand new and literal combination of painting and sculpture. As the name implies, shaped canvas is a painting that is not composed on the traditional square or rectangle shaped canvas but instead on an irregular shaped one. The style of Shaped Canvas Painting is not only just an element of Post-Painterly Abstraction, but instead exists to make very interesting claims about illusion as well as space on its own (3).
Frank Stella Created the work Harran II (1967), and other such shaped canvas works, as if in an effort to break away from the constraints of the strictly framed and tight canvas. Instead Stella strove to use a shaped canvas as a literal depiction of figure, as opposed to merely representing it, which then in turn created a new kind of illusion within the realm of painting.
          When looking at the impact and voice that shaped canvas pieces where attempting to display, the work Harran II (1967) seems to possess much of the characteristic rhetoric. The use of polymer and fluorescent polymer paint on its own demonstrates a desire to utilize some of the new materials as well as ideas of the time. Separate, blocked out, solid, and consistent lines of color, typical of the non painterly, meet together at a point to form geometric shapes and patterns that seems to draw the eye from the top left corner down a maze to the bottom right of this extraordinary piece. Harran II (1967) is a composition consisting of a large circle that is formed through the almost meticulous combination of the perfect angles which were constructed with the help of protractor devices. Circulating bands of color create “rainbow” like ribbons that all come together to form the edges of the canvas. This composition of shape together with the new technology of the florescent paint that was used come together to form a work of art that has its very own lyrical capacity as well as decorative quality (4).
          There seems to be a common theme within shaped canvas paintings and that is the desire to create a literal representation of shape and form, as opposed to a simple drawing or depiction of that form. Harran II (1967) combines arches and angles to create movement and a whole new kind of illusion within painting. This piece could in a way be considered a sculpture that could be hung from a wall. In this way, Frank Stella seems to cast away the conception of illusionistic space and instead captures space outside the constrictions of the normal rectangular or square shaped canvas.Harran II (1967) represents a relatively high degree of technical accomplishment within the realm of painting not only when speaking of the medium and material of which it was produced, but also when considering the composition of angles and space.
          Frank Stella has had a major influence within the art world throughout his entire career and his contributions to shaped canvas painting and post-painterly abstraction are numerable. In works such as Harran II (1967) Frank Stella escaped the traditional conventions of canvas painting and uses florescent color on a carved out plain creating his own space and creating a literal illusion within painting.



Frank Stella, Itata, 1967


Frank Stella, Turkish Mambo, 1967




Ellsworth Kelly, Yellow-Orange, 1968



Paul Feeley, Ochus, 1969



Nicholas Krushenick, Zig Zag, 1970


Mark Rothko, Chapel, 1971


THE ROTHKO CHAPEL, BY MIRELLA MARDAKIS
           “A picture lives by companionship, expanding and quickening in the eyes of the sensitive observer. It dies by the same token. It is therefore a risky and unfeeling act to send it out into the world. How often it must be permanently impaired by the eyes of the vulgar and the cruelty of the impotent who would extend the affliction universally!” (Hess 42). Mark Rothko, during the late period of his artistic career, became increasingly protective of his artwork, perceiving his pieces as pathways to spiritual enlightenment and religious exultation. This attitude resulted in the completion of what is now known as the Rothko Chapel in Houston, Texas. Though he rejected all labels applied to his style, contemporary and modern art critics have and continue to label Rothko as one of the most prominent painters of the abstract expressionism movement of the mid-twentieth century. He channeled his style to complete, as Dominique de Menil himself has dubbed, “the greatest religious monument of his time” (Nodelman 9).
Rothko was approached by Mrs. Dominique de Menil on April 17, 1964, to produce a set of paintings to adorn the interior of a proposed chapel that was to be built for the University of St. Thomas. The project was commissioned by Dominique and John de Menil, two ardent patrons of art in Texas. By the 1960s, Rothko had rejected his previous affiliations with surrealism and mythological inspirations, turning instead to religious inspiration and use of primitive color. Only a few years previously, Rothko had withdrawn from the Seagram commission after working on the paintings for two years. Dominique and John de Menil were so impressed by the Seagram paintings that they even proposed buying the paintings to use in the chapel, an idea that Rothko refused. Yet the artist determinedly agreed to begin a new series of pieces for the chapel (Nodelman 33-34).
The chapel itself was initially designed by renowned American architect Philip Johnson, and later finished by Howard Barnstone and Eugene Aubry, as a small, octagonal structure. Rothko welcomed the project all the more enthusiastically because, for the first time in his career, he would have complete control in creating and arranging a suit of paintings to his liking. Beginning in the 1940s, Rothko had turned extreme and meticulous attention to the display of his art. He dictated specifications such as “hanging height, the intervals between and juxtapositions of paintings, the placement of paintings within the architectural features of an interior, the color of the wall surface upon which pictures would be seen, and more importantly, the character and strength of the lighting” (Nodelman 35). Throughout the fifties and up until the end of his life in 1970, Rothko had exhibited his works in a variety of museums and galleries and been given several commissions, such as the Harvard paintings from 1961 to 1964. Despite the flexibility and accommodations afforded to him as a result of his growing influence and prominence as an avant-garde artist, most of his exhibitions and commissioned works were eventually moved and changed to positions not originally intended. Some of his works were placed in interiors with distractions that detracted from the overall experience, such as “the distraction of views through doorways…Goldwater, for example, commented on how at the MoMA retrospective, the rooms containing paintings of a related palette were disrupted by the unavoidable glimpse of a dissonant work in another room” (Clearwater 158).  
The chapel eradicated the problem of doorway interference and peripheral distraction by its compact, octagonal, single-room design. The viewer is presented with the fourteen paintings in a “‘wraparound’ viewing situation overtly centered upon the observer” (Clearwater 158). The viewer “is drawn in to an experience of the immensity of nature, an experience that has distinctly religious connotations” (Edwards). The chapel was, finally, an architecture designed explicitly to accommodate Rothko’s genius. 
                  Upon first glance, viewers might confuse the paintings for a series of monochromatic works. Rothko relied primarily on dark red, mulberry, dark purple, and black in all of the pieces. The viewer must stare at each single piece to discern the different shades. This initial perception is difficult at first to achieve, “but this enhanced attention is not instantaneous in its results: the eye must acclimatize to the abnormally low value range before it can draw the fine discrimination upon which all depends. The moment of viewing is dilated in time and the process itself forced towards conscious awareness” (Nodelman 175). In several of the paintings, a darker rectangle forms a border, shrinking and expanding the perspective of the paintings. Rothko also made use of the white wall of the chapel as “the framing element that modulates the atmospheric colour” (Clearwater 160).
                  The original intention was to assign the chapel to the Roman Catholic faith, though nowadays it holds no denomination. However, critics have questioned Rothko’s use of dark colors in such a religious space. He told Dominique de Menil that during his visit to the twelfth-century basilica of Santa Maria Assunta on the island of Torcello he became fascinated with the juxtaposition of the foreboding Last Judgment at one of the basilica and the delicate Epiphany of Virgin and Child on the opposing apse. To capture this dichotomy of love and damnation, Rothko juxtaposed a large black painting at the entrance to his chapel with the triptych at the opposing apse, which middle panel was “slightly lighter, with a hint of pink” (Nodelman 9). The religious influences in the chapel are subtle and completely dependent on the viewer to find them. In fact, as many critics gather, the chapel’s main purpose is to coax the unconscious to light, to force the viewer to search. In “the existential allegory of the Rothko Chapel,” David Antin comes full circle with his philosophical train of thought to state that “there's nothing obvious about the chapel which is what makes it so effective its an uncompromising difficult and secular work…but if you try to experience it offers you a confrontation with the existential condition that ultimately characterizes our experience in the world” (Phillips and Crow 133).



Helen Frankenthaler, Nepenthe, 1972





Kenneth Noland, Following Sea, 1974






Anselm Kiefer, Keliogabal, 1974





John Hoyland, Pemba 24.4, 1977



Bibliography and Works Cited

Curatorial Statement
[1] Greenberg, Clement. "Post Painterly Abstraction." Sharecom Industries Ltd. Web. 02 Feb. 2012. <http://www.sharecom.ca/greenberg/ppaessay.html>.
[2] "The Art Story: Post-Painterly Abstraction Movement." The Art Story: Modern Art Movements, Artists, Ideas and Topics. Web. 02 Feb. 2012. http://www.theartstory.org/movement-post-painterly-abstraction.htm.
[3] Fried, Michael. 1978. Three American painters, Kenneth Noland, Jules Olitski, Frank Stella: Fogg Art Museum, 21 April-30 May 1965. New York: Garland Pub. Co.
[4] Wilkin, Karen. 2007. Notes on color field painting. Vol. 26, https://search.ebscohost.com/login.aspx?direct=true&db=aft&AN=505234514&site=ehost-live.
[5] Colpitt, Frances. "The Shape of Painting in the 1960s." Art Journal 50.1 (1991): 52-56. JSTOR. Web. 30 Feb. 2012. <http://www.jstor.org/stable/777086
[6] Geldzahler, Henry. 1990. Jules Oltiski. Salander-O’Reilly Galleries, Inc.
[7] Moffett, Kenworth. 1973. Jules Olitski. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
[8] Nodelman, Sheldon. The Rothko Chapel Paintings: Origins, Structures, Meaning. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1997.
[9] The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, "Revelation: Major Paintings by Jules Olitski." Accessed April 12, 2012. http://www.mfah.org/site_media/uploads/attachments/2012-03-28/Exhibition_Wall_Text.pdf.

Ellsworth Kelly, by Carolyn Porras
[1] Anna Moszynska, Post-painterly Abstraction, Grove Art Online, http://www.oxfordartonline.com/subscriber/article/grove/art/T069007 (March 29, 2010).
[2] Wilkin, Karen. "Notes on Color Field painting." New Criterion 26, no. 2 (October 2007): 44-48. Art Full Text (H.W. Wilson), (March 29, 2012).
[3] Rose, Barbara. 2007. "Color Me Washington." Art & Antiques 30, no. 5: 56-61. Art Full Text (H.W. Wilson), EBSCOhost(accessed March 29, 2012).http://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=6112452060540495743
[4] Diane Waldman, Ellsworth Kelly: A Retrospective, ed. Diane Waldman (New York, New York: Guggenheim Museum Publications, 1996).
[5] Roberta Bernstein, "Red Green Blue: Distallations of Memory in Ellsworth Kelly's Art," Ellsworth Kelly: Red Green Blue, 2002: 20.
[6] Ibid, 2002: 20.
[7] Diane Waldman, "Ellsworth Kelly," Ellsworth Kelly: A Retrospective (Guggenheim Museum Publications), 1996: 19.
[8] Ibid, 1996: 21.

Kenneth Noland, by Eva Mosley 
[1] Fried, Michael. "Hover by Kenneth Noland." Acquisitions (Fogg Art Museum).1964 (1964): pp. 60-63. Web.
[2] Noland, Kenneth, and Diane Waldman. Kenneth Noland a Retrospective. New York: Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, 1977. Print.
[3] "Noland, Kenneth." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. 28 Mar. 2012 <http://www.oxfordartonline.com.lp.hscl.ufl.edu/subscriber/article/grove/art/T062677>. Web.
[4] Wilkin, Karen 1940-, et al. Color as Field: American Painting, 1950-1975 / Karen Wilkin; with an Essay by Carl Belz. New York: New Haven: American Federation of Arts; in association with Yale University Press, 2007. Print.

Jules Olitski, by Leslie Howard
[1] Fried, Michael. 1978. Three American painters, Kenneth Noland, Jules Olitski, Frank Stella: Fogg Art Museum, 21 April-30 May 1965. New York: Garland Pub. Co.
[2] Geldzahler, Henry. 1990. Jules Oltiski. Salander-O’Reilly Galleries, Inc.
[3] Moffett, Kenworth. 1973.  Jules Olitski. Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.
[4] Olitski, Jules, and Charles Millard. 1988. Jules Olitski: stained paintings 1961-1964 : [exhibition] April 9 to 30, 1988. New York: AndrĂ© Emmerich Gallery.

Frank Stella, by Jenn Dillon
[1] Greenberg, Clement. "Post Painterly Abstraction." Sharecom Industries Ltd.  <http://www.sharecom.ca/greenberg/ppaessay.html>. Accessed February 2, 2012. 
[2] The Art Story: Modern Art Movements, Artists, Ideas and Topics. "The Art Story: Post-Painterly Abstraction Movement."http://www.theartstory.org/movement-post-painterly-abstraction.htm. Accessed February 2, 2012.
[3] Colpitt, Frances, "The Shape of Painting in the 1960s," Art Journal 50.1 (1991): 52-56, accessed February 30, 2012,<http://www.jstor.org/stable/777086>.                                          
[4] Avgikos, Jan, "Guggenheim," Collection Online, accessed February 5, 2012, <http://www.guggenheim.org/new-york/collections/collection-online/show-full/piece/?search=Frank Stella>.
[5] Harran II, 1967. Polymer and fluorescent polymer paint on canvas, 10 x 20 feet (304.8 x 609.6 cm). Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, Gift, Mr. Irving Blum 82.2976. © 2012 Frank Stella/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. (Artwork)

Mark Rothko, by Mirella Mardakis
[1] Clearwater, Bonnie. The Rothko Book. London: Tate Publishing, 2006.
[2] Edwards, David. "Mark Rothko: Forever Sublime." The Blurb. N.p., n.d. Web. 28 Mar 2012. <http://www.theblurb.com.au/Issue29/Rothko.htm>.
[3] Hess, Barbara. Abstract Expressionism. Los Angeles: Taschen America LLC, 2005. 42.
[4] Nodelman, Sheldon. The Rothko Chapel Paintings: Origins, Structures, Meaning. Austin: University of Texas Press, 1997.
[5] Phillips, Glenn, and Thomas Crow. Seeing Rothko. Los Angeles: Getty Publications, 2005.