STANDARDS

Core Art Standards: VA2, VA5, VA9

CCSS: R2, R7, SL5

Abstraction Today

How do these artists build upon tradition?

How do these artists build on tradition?

The Abstract Expressionists gave artists who came after them the freedom to make art that looks freewheeling and spontaneous. But like those initial trailblazers, many artists today follow specific and careful processes to make works that seem more impulsive than they really are.

Abstract Expressionists gave artists permission to make art that looks unplanned and free. But like the early Abstract Expressionists, many artists today follow careful processes to make works that seem more random than they really are.

Ian Davenport (b. 1966), Bramante Colourfall (Poured Staircase), 2021. Acrylic on MDF and aluminum panel. Courtesy of Prudence Cuming and Ian Davenport Studio.

How does the location of this artwork affect the way viewers experience it?

Follow the Beat

Ian Davenport usually listens to music while working. Do you see a visual rhythm in his work above? “There is a sort of parallel between musical rhythm and the pulsing lines and striping beats,” he says.

The British painter’s 2021 Bramante Colourfall (Poured Staircase) covers a staircase at the Chiostro del Bramante, a 16th-century cloister in Rome. It’s an illusion: Instead of pouring the paint directly on the stairs of the historic building, which could have caused damage, Davenport poured parallel lines of acrylic paint on fiberboard and aluminum panels. He then installed the panels over the stairs.

The lines remain precise as they travel down the stairs, but notice how they pool and mix at the bottom. This free-flowing work reflects Davenport’s eagerness to follow a process while also embracing chance.

British painter Ian Davenport listens to music while he works. Do you see a visual rhythm in the example above?

Davenport made Bramante Colourfall (Poured Staircase) in 2021. It covers a staircase in a 16th-century building in Rome. Pouring paint directly on the historic building would have damaged it. So Davenport created an illusion. He poured lines of acrylic paint onto fiberboard and aluminum panels. Once the paint dried, he installed the panels over the stairs. The colors are straight and neat on the stairs. But they mix in unpredictable ways at the bottom. Chance is an important part of Davenport’s process.

Bernard Frize (b. 1949), Uji, 2020. Acrylic and resin on canvas. Courtesy of Galerie nächst St. Stephan Rosemarie Schwarzwälder. Photo by Markus Wörgötter.

Why are Frize’s rules important to his process?

Follow the Rules

French painter Bernard Frize believes that an artist should make as few decisions as possible, so he follows a strict set of self-imposed rules. Since the 1980s, he has used the same blend of acrylic paint and resin. He also restricts the colors he can use. “I always use the same eight colors,” he explains, “which give me so many possibilities and combinations that I don’t see why I should change them.”

Frize also gives himself a structure for each painting, such as a grid, as in his 2020 Uji, above. He drags the thick acrylic and resin mixture across the canvas with a wide brush. By having these constraints, Frize can leave the final painting up to chance. He says that one of his favorite things about painting is creating “an engine that runs by itself. One that no longer needs me.”

Bernard Frize is a French painter. He believes artists should make as few decisions as possible when they’re working. So he sets strict rules for himself. He always uses the same blend of acrylic paint and resin. He also limits his color choices. “I always use the same eight colors,” he explains. “[Those] give me so many possibilities and combinations that I don’t see why I should change them.”

Frize gives himself a structure for each painting. For his 2020 Uji, above, he works in a grid. Frize uses a wide brush to drag acrylic paint and resin across the canvas.

Frize starts with rules. But the final results are up to chance. One of his favorite things about painting is creating “an engine that runs by itself,” he says. “One that no longer needs me.”

Sarah Cain (b. 1979), Mystic Glory, 2019. Courtesy of Sarah Cain.

Why is intuition key to Cain’s artwork?

Follow Your Intuition

Do you feel your pulse quicken as you watch shapes dance across the painting above? The luminous colors in Sarah Cain’s artwork vibrate like caffeine for the eyes. The Los Angeles-based artist doesn’t sketch before painting. “The way I paint is totally intuitive,” Cain says. “I sort of see it right before it’s going to happen, and I have to stay in a state where I’m open to seeing it.”

Cain completed the 2019 painting Mystic Glory on sheet music. An array of geometric shapes layered over playful squiggles in acrylic, gouache, and watercolor pop against the purple background. The composition might make you smile, but that’s not Cain’s goal. “I don’t set out to make happy paintings,” she explains. 

Through abstraction, Cain explores processes, like crafting and graffiti, that critics and historians have traditionally seen as beneath fine art. Molly Donovan, a curator at the National Gallery of Art, says the artist “brings the tradition of abstract painting into the present.” Compare Cain’s work with those featured on pages 2-9. What do you notice?

Look at the shapes dancing across the painting by Sarah Cain above. Do the colors energize you?

Cain lives in Los Angeles. She doesn’t sketch before making a painting. She trusts her instincts. “I sort of see it right before it’s going to happen, and I have to stay in a state where I’m open to seeing it.”

Cain painted her 2019 Mystic Glory on sheet music. The artist layers geometric shapes and playful squiggles. The colors pop against the purple background. This work might make you smile. But that’s not Cain’s goal. “I don’t set out to make happy paintings,” she explains.

Compare Cain’s painting with those shown on pages 2-9. What do you notice?

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