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Elaine de Kooning

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Elaine de Kooning
Elaine de Kooning c. 1974
Born
Elaine Marie Catherine Fried

(1918-03-12)March 12, 1918[1]
Brooklyn, New York
Died(1989-02-01)February 1, 1989 (aged 70)
Southampton, New York
NationalityAmerican
Known forPainting
MovementNew York Figurative Expressionism, Abstract Expressionism
Spouse
(m. 1943)

Elaine Marie Catherine de Kooning (/də ˈknɪŋ/ KOO-ning,[2] Dutch: [də ˈkoːnɪŋ]; née Fried; March 12, 1918[1] – February 1, 1989[3]) was an Abstract Expressionist and Figurative Expressionist painter in the post-World War II era. She wrote extensively on the art of the period[4] and was an editorial associate for Art News magazine.[5]

Early life and education

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Elaine de Kooning was born Elaine Marie Catherine Fried in 1918 in Flatbush, New York.[6] Later in life she told people she was born in 1920. Her parents were Mary Ellen O'Brien, an Irish Catholic, and Charles Frank Fried, a Protestant of Jewish descent.[7][8] Her father Charles was a plant manager for the Bond Bread Company.

Elaine was the eldest of four children; Marjorie (Luyckx), Conrad, and Peter were her siblings.[9] Her mother, despite being recalled as less loving and attentive than some parents by Elaine's younger sister, supported her eldest's artistic endeavors.[6]

Elaine's mother started taking Elaine to museums at the age of five and taught her to draw what she saw. Elaine's childhood room was decorated with painting reproductions.[8] Her mother was committed to the Creedmoor Psychiatric Center for a year during Elaine's childhood after a neighbor reported her for neglect of her children.[6]

Studies

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In grade school, Elaine began drawing and selling portraits of children attending her school.[8] She was interested in and did well at sports as well as art.[8] Elaine studied at Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn. After graduating from High School, she briefly studied math at Hunter College in New York City, where she befriended a group of abstract and Social Realist painters. In 1937, she attended the Leonardo da Vinci Art School and went on to study at the American Artists School, both in New York City. While attending school, Elaine made money working as an art school model.[8]

Marriage to Willem de Kooning

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In the fall of 1938 her teacher Robert Jonas introduced her to Willem de Kooning at a Manhattan cafeteria when she was 20 and he 34.[10] Elaine had admired his artwork before meeting him. After meeting, Willem began to instruct her in drawing and painting. They painted in his loft at 143 West 21st Street, and he was known for his harsh criticism of her work, "sternly requiring that she draw and redraw a figure or still life and insisting on fine, accurate, clear linear definition supported by precisely modulated shading."[11] He even destroyed many of her drawings, but this "impelled Elaine to strive for both precision and grace in her work".[11] When they married on December 9, 1943, she moved into his loft and they continued sharing studio spaces.[11]

The couple had what was later called an open marriage; they both were casual about sex and about each other's affairs. Elaine had affairs with men who helped further Willem's career, such as Harold Rosenberg, a renowned art critic; Thomas B. Hess, a writer about art and managing editor for ARTnews; and Charles Egan, owner of the Charles Egan Gallery. Willem had a daughter, Lisa de Kooning, in 1956, as a result of his affair with Joan Ward[who?].[11]

Elaine and Willem both struggled with alcoholism, which eventually led to their separation in 1957.[11] While separated, Elaine remained in New York, struggling with poverty, and Willem moved to Long Island and dealt with depression. Despite struggling with alcoholism, they both continued painting. Although separated for nearly twenty years, they never divorced, ultimately reuniting in 1976.[11]

Career

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Elaine de Kooning was an accomplished landscape and portrait artist active in the Abstract Expressionist movement of the mid-twentieth century. She was a member of the Eighth Street Club (the Club) in New York City.[8] The Club functioned as a space to discuss ideas. Among this group of artists were Willem de Kooning, Jimmy Rosati, Giorgio Spaventi, Milton Resnick, Pat Passlof, Earl Kerkam, Ludwig Sander, Angelo Ippolito, Franz Kline, Clyfford Still, and Hans Hofmann. A membership position for a woman was rare at that time.

Elaine promoted Willem's work throughout their relationship. Along with her own work as a painter, she was committed to gaining recognition for her husband's work. Though she was very serious about her own work, she was well-aware that it was often overshadowed by her husband's fame. After showing their work in their 1951 exhibition at the Sidney Janis Gallery, Artists: Man and Wife, which also included Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner, Ben Nicholson and Barbara Hepworth, and Jean Arp and Sophie Taeuber-Arp, Elaine said, "It seemed like a good idea at the time, but later I came to think that it was a bit of a put-down of the women. There was something about the show that sort of attached women-wives- to the real artists".[11] Despite this effect on her own career, Elaine continued to promote her husband.

In 1952 she spent the summer at Art dealer Leo Castelli's house at The Hamptons with Willem de Kooning.[12]

In April 1954 Elaine presented her first Solo exhibition at the Stable Gallery (she sometimes declared it was in 1952 but the gallery was founded in 1953)[10][12]

Women were often marginalized in the Abstract Expressionist movement, functioning as objects and accessories to confirm the masculinity of their male counterparts.[13] For that reason, she chose to sign her artworks with her initials rather than her full name, to avoid her paintings' being labeled as feminine in a traditionally masculine movement, and to not be confused with her husband Willem de Kooning.

Elaine and Willem were also part of the New York School scene, which included Jackson Pollock.[14]

Elaine de Kooning was an important writer and teacher of art. She began working at the magazine ARTnews in 1948, and wrote articles about major figures in the art world. She wrote about one hundred articles for Art News magazine.[15] Elaine de Kooning was the first American artist in the 1950s to take on the role of artists' critic.[15] "As an writer, she wrote about culture, art, and new ideas to her generation of artists and readers."[15] Although Elaine was a successful writer, she considered herself a "painter by nature."[15] Elaine de kooning's art and writing were all devoted to art and humanity.[15]

Over the course of her life, she held teaching posts at many institutions of higher education. In 1957, after Elaine and Willem de Kooning separated, she took on a series of short-term teaching jobs to support herself. She taught at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque; the University of California in Davis; at Carnegie Mellon, at Southampton College on Long Island; at the Cooper Union and Pratt Institute in New York; at Yale; at RISD in Rhode Island; Bard College;[16] the University of Georgia and the New York Studio School in Paris.[8] Between 1976 and 1978, she served as the first Lamar Dodd Visiting Professor of Art at the University of Georgia (UGA) in Athens. In 1985 she was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate member, and became a full academician in 1988.

In 2016 de Kooning was one of twelve female artists featured in the "Women of Abstract Expressionism" exhibition organized by the Denver Art Museum.[17] The purpose of this show was to highlight the unique talents and perspectives of female artists who, as was previously noted, were often dismissed or overshadowed by their male counterparts. The show later traveled to the Mint Museum and the Palm Springs Art Museum.[18]

A painting to me is primarily a verb, not a noun, an event first and only secondarily an image.[19]

—Elaine de Kooning

"For Elaine, everything was always new, never resolved, always being unmade and made, as if it had never been made before. She did not accumulate experience and learn what to expect ... Life was a constant surprise."[15] Being the wife of the famous painter Willem de Kooning, she did not receive real recognition for her own achievement until a few years before she died. Her works are in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, The Metropolitan Museum Of Art, and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York.

Art

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Elaine de Kooning made both abstract and figurative paintings and drawings of still life, cityscapes, and portraits. Her work was influenced by the artists Willem de Kooning and Arshile Gorky, artists who worked abstractly and also in a figurative way. Her earlier work comprised watercolors and still lifes, including fifty watercolor sketches inspired by a statue in the Luxembourg Gardens in Paris. Later in her career, her work fused abstraction with mythology, primitive imagery, and realism. Her gestural style of portraiture is often noted, although her work was mostly figurative and representational, and rarely purely abstract. She produced a diverse body of work over the course of her lifetime, including sculpture, etchings, and work inspired by cave drawings, all in addition to her many paintings. Her work presents a combination between painting and drawing, surface and contour, stroke and line, color and light, transparency and opacity.

When asked about her style she said, "I'm more interested in character than style. Character comes out of the work. Style is applied or imposed on the work. Style can be a prison.[20]

Early works

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In the summer of 1948, Elaine and Willem de Kooning spent a summer at Black Mountain College near Asheville, North Carolina. Elaine studied under Josef Albers, R. Buckminster Fuller and Merce Cunningham.[21] A regular participant in theatrical performances, Elaine was very involved in the college's social life.[22]

Portraits

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Merce Cunningham, 1962, National Portrait Gallery, DC
Merce Cunningham, 1962, National Portrait Gallery, Washington, D.C.
=John F. Kennedy, 1963, Elaine de Kooning
John F. Kennedy, 1963, National Portrait Gallery

A large portion of Elaine de Kooning's work was in portraiture. In addition to painting many self-portraits throughout the course of her life, her subjects were often fellow artists—usually men—including poets Frank O'Hara, John Ashbery, and Allen Ginsberg; writer Donald Barthelme; art critic Harold Rosenberg; Thomas B. Hess, managing editor of Artnews; choreographer Merce Cunningham; legendary art dealer Leo Castelli; innovative jazz musician Ornette Coleman; the famous Brazilian soccer star Pele; and painters Joop Sanders, Fairfield Porter, Alex Katz and her husband, Willem de Kooning. Although she worked in a gestural Abstract Expressionist mode, she never abandoned working with the figure ensuring the person's likeness.[23]

In 1944, Elaine met 22 year-old Dutch artist Joop Sanders at a Virgil Thomson concert. They agreed to pose for each other and that began a years-long collaboration that produced dozens of portraits. Elaine called hers the "Joop Paintings". After spending a day drawing Sanders, she would work for a week turning the drawings into a painting. In the process, Elaine said she became "hooked" on portraits, through which she melded those aspects she found most intriguing in her subject with elements of herself, according to Mary Gabriel's "Ninth Street Women" (page 138)[12]

Elaine employed a wide range of virtuosic drawing and painting techniques: finely detailed pencil drawings and more free ink drawings, crosshatching, erasure, stumping, and improvisational graphic lines, thin paint and impasto, “thin, dripping washes of bold color…” with many media: pencil, ink, charcoal, gouache, collage, mixed media, oil on paper, canvas and masonite.[24]

'She achieves a sense of distinguishing facial features and captures each subject's presence with sharp, jagged strokes of paint… A drawing of [her brother] Conrad from 1951 presents [his] head and shoulders against a dark background, with a combination of careful lines and darker strokes defining a contemplative figure with great subtlety.”[25]

In regard to her portraiture, Elaine de Kooning wrote, "when I painted my seated men, I saw them as gyroscopes. Portraiture always fascinated me because I love the particular gesture of a particular expression or stance ... Working on the figure, I wanted paint to sweep through as feelings sweep through ..." She studied each person "to find the characteristic pose that would define them."[8] Elaine de Kooning made portraits of men in her life, such as her husband Willem de Kooning and gallery owner Charles Egan, with whom she had an affair while he was representing her husband Willem de Kooning.[26] A great example of this is the series of studies and finished portraits of President John F. Kennedy, which was the most important commission in her career. De Kooning also did a series of men with children, and a series of women after she resumed painting a year after John F. Kennedy's death.

New Mexico

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In the fall of 1958, until late spring of 1959 Elaine got a teaching appointment as visiting professor at the University of New Mexico. This gave her the opportunity to immerse herself in the characteristic color and space of the Southwestern landscape. She visited Juarez, Mexico where she attended many bullfights. She created a series of painting inspired by the theme with bold and bright colors.[20][27][28] She wrote that "the cottonwood trees and aspens had turned an overwhelming gold" and that "New England mountains are so well planted, but the New Mexico mountains seems to move toward you".[10] During her stay she travelled to Santa Fe and visited Georgia O Keeffe. She described her as a "grand old gal" who "looks like a monk and was very witty in a dry sort of way".[10]

She started to experiment with acrylic paint during that period. She made connections with students such as William Conger and became friends with artists Joan Oppenheimer, Connie Fox or Margaret Randall.[10] She also got involved with Robert Mallary, a fellow instructor.[10]

Bacchus series

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Bacchus #3 (1978), National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, D.C.

The Bacchus series of paintings and watercolors that Elaine de Kooning generated over seven years began in 1976. She was captivated by a 19th-century sculpture of the Roman god Bacchus, which she saw in the Luxembourg Gardens in Paris. She particularly admired the sculpture’s twisting, dynamic form, which portrays the commotion created by the drunken god and his equally inebriated attendants. It was the first time she ever used acrylic paint.[29][30]

Later works

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In 1983 Elaine visited the paleolithic cave paintings of Lascaux in France and Altamira in Spain and produced a series of paintings titled Cave Walls. In Paleolithic art she found the roots of Abstract Expressionism, since they have the same improvisational processes and spontaneous technique. In other words, "she found Paleolithic art close in spirit to twentieth-century art."[15]

In 1985 when Elaine de Kooning visited the cave in the Spanish Pyrenees, she realized that the geological formations and textures of the cave wall were the same as her ground of flying color, drips, washes, and strokes, animal forms and drawing rising out of its contours; giving her the affirmation to her own way of working. These series of paintings were shown at the Fischbach Gallery in November 1988, three months before her death.

Exhibitions

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In 1951 De Kooning was included in the 9th Street Art Exhibition.[31]

De Kooning's work has been featured in numerous solo exhibitions as well as in a multitude of group shows in commercial art galleries as well as in major art museums and institutions. The artist's work has received increasing critical acclaim posthumously, resulting in exhibitions such as the major museum show "Elaine De Kooning: Portraits" hosted by the National Portrait Gallery in 2015 in Washington, DC.[32]

Public collections

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Works by this artist are in the permanent collections of:

Death

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De Kooning died on February 1, 1989, in Southampton, New York,[3] a year after having a lung removed due to lung cancer.[1]

Legacy

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Mary Beth Edelson's Some Living American Women Artists / Last Supper (1972) appropriated Leonardo da Vinci’s The Last Supper, with the heads of notable women artists collaged over the heads of Christ and his apostles. Elaine was among those notable women artists. This image, addressing the role of religious and art historical iconography in the subordination of women, became "one of the most iconic images of the feminist art movement."[42][43]

In 2015, the Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center hosted "Elaine de Kooning Portrayed," an exhibition dedicated to portraits, likenesses, and reflections on de Kooning by other artists, including her husband Willem as well as Arshile Gorky, Fairfield Porter, Hedda Sterne, Alex Katz, Robert De Niro, Sr., Ray Johnson, Joop Sanders, Paul Harris, and Edvins Strautman.

In 2016 de Kooning was included in the exhibition Women of Abstract Expressionism at the Denver Art Museum.[44]

In 2017 de Kooning was one of the subjects of the book Ninth Street Women: Lee Krasner, Elaine de Kooning, Grace Hartigan, Joan Mitchell, and Helen Frankenthaler: Five Painters and the Movement That Changed Modern Art by Mary Gabriel.[45]

In 2023 her work was included in the exhibition Action, Gesture, Paint: Women Artists and Global Abstraction 1940-1970 at the Whitechapel Gallery in London.[46]

One of the few residences owned by Elaine de Kooning during her lifetime was a studio at Alewive Brook Road in East Hampton. The current owners are reportedly developing an artists' residency/alternative exhibition space referred to as "the Elaine de Kooning house."[47]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Elaine de Kooning". TheArtStory.org.
  2. ^ "de Kooning". CollinsDictionary.com. HarperCollins.
  3. ^ a b Glueck, Grace (February 2, 1989). "Elaine de Kooning, Artist and Teacher, Dies at 68". New York Times.
  4. ^ Swain, Martica (1997). "Review". Woman's Art Journal. 18 (2): 31–33. JSTOR 1358549.
  5. ^ Edvard Lieber, "Willem de Kooning: Reflections in the Studio", p.10.
  6. ^ a b c "Elaine de Kooning Biography, Art and Analysis of Work".
  7. ^ "Fried Surname Meaning & Fried Family History at Ancestry.com®". www.ancestry.com. Retrieved 2024-10-09.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h Moonan, Wendy. "Why Elaine de Kooning Sacrificed her Own Amazing Career for her More-Famous Husband's".
  9. ^ Glueck, Grace (2 February 1989). "Elaine de Kooning, Artist and Teacher, Dies at 68". The New York Times.
  10. ^ a b c d e f Curtis, Cathy (2017). A Generous Vision: The Creative Life of Elaine de Kooning. Oxford University Press. p. 221. ISBN 978-0190498474.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Hall, Lee. Elaine and Bill: Portrait of a Marriage.
  12. ^ a b c Gabriel, Mary. Ninth Street Women.
  13. ^ "Fine Arts : Special Exhibits". El Palacio. 65 (5). October 1958.
  14. ^ "Abstract Expressionism & the New York School | Khan Academy". Khan Academy. Archived from the original on 2022-11-27. Retrieved 2017-03-11.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g De Kooning, Elaine. The Spirit of Abstract Expressionism, Selected Writings.
  16. ^ "Breaking News, World News & Multimedia". Retrieved 2017-03-11.
  17. ^ Marter, Joan M. (2016). Women of abstract expressionism. Denver New Haven: Denver Art Museum Yale University Press. p. 169. ISBN 9780300208429.
  18. ^ "Women of Abstract Expressionism". Denver Art Museum. Retrieved 2018-03-09.
  19. ^ It is, No.4, Autumn, 1959. Magazine for Abstract Art, Second Half Publishing Co., New York pp. 29, 30.
  20. ^ a b "Bullfight | Smithsonian American Art Museum". americanart.si.edu. Retrieved 2020-03-03.
  21. ^ "Elaine and Willem de Kooning + The Summer of 1948". Black Mountain College Museum + Arts Center. 2019-09-28. Retrieved 2020-03-03.
  22. ^ "Elaine de Kooning". The Johnson Collection, LLC. Retrieved 2020-03-27.
  23. ^ "National Portrait Gallery Presents Rarely Seen Portraits". Smithsonian. January 14, 2015. Retrieved 2015-12-20.
  24. ^ Elaine de Kooning : portraits. De Kooning, Elaine,, Fortune, Brandon Brame,, Gibson, Ann Eden, 1944–, Čupić, Simona,, National Portrait Gallery (Smithsonian Institution). Washington, D.C. 2015. ISBN 9783791354385. OCLC 898530063.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
  25. ^ Elaine de Kooning : portraits. De Kooning, Elaine,, Fortune, Brandon Brame,, Gibson, Ann Eden, 1944–, Čupić, Simona,, National Portrait Gallery (Smithsonian Institution). Washington, D.C. 2015. p. 21. ISBN 9783791354385. OCLC 898530063.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)
  26. ^ "The Charles Egan Gallery". The Art Story. Retrieved 2019-03-22.
  27. ^ "Elaine de Kooning. Bullfight. 1960 | MoMA". The Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 2020-03-03.
  28. ^ "Women of Abstract Expressionism Artist Elaine de Kooning". Denver Art Museum. 15 September 2016. Retrieved 2020-03-03.
  29. ^ "Bacchus #3 | National Museum of Women in the Arts". nmwa.org. Retrieved 2020-03-03.
  30. ^ "Elaine de Kooning Artworks & Famous Paintings". The Art Story. Retrieved 2020-03-03.
  31. ^ "On the Legendary 9th Street Art Exhibition". Widewalls. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  32. ^ Midgette, Ann (March 12, 2015). "Elaine De Kooning, often eclipsed by her famous husband, gets her due". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2016-05-27.
  33. ^ "Elaine de Kooning". Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  34. ^ "Elaine de Kooning". The Guggenheim Museums and Foundation. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  35. ^ "Elaine de Kooning | Self-Portrait". The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  36. ^ "Bullfight". Denver Art Museum. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  37. ^ "Elaine de Kooning". NMWA. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  38. ^ "Elaine de Kooning |". LACMA Collections. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  39. ^ "Elaine de Kooning". Smithsonian American Art Museum. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  40. ^ "National Portrait Gallery presents rarely seen portraits by Elaine de Kooning". ArtDaily. Retrieved 2016-05-27.
  41. ^ "Mary Beth Edelson". The Frost Art Museum Drawing Project. Retrieved 11 January 2014.
  42. ^ "Mary Beth Adelson". Clara – Database of Women Artists. Washington, D.C.: National Museum of Women in the Arts. Archived from the original on 10 January 2014. Retrieved 10 January 2014.
  43. ^ "Women of Abstract Expressionism". Denver Art Museum. Retrieved 20 April 2023.
  44. ^ Gabriel, Mary (2018). Ninth Street women : Lee Krasner, Elaine de Kooning, Grace Hartigan, Joan Mitchell, and Helen Frankenthaler : five painters and the movement that changed modern art (First ed.). New York: Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 978-0316226189.
  45. ^ "Casa de Kooning: An Afternoon at East Hampton's New Artist Colony". ArtNews. Retrieved 2016-05-27.

Sources

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