Jackson Pollock
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Death | 68 years ago |
Date of birth | January 28,1912 |
Zodiac sign | Aquarius |
Born | Cody |
Wyoming | |
United States | |
Date of died | August 11,1956 |
Died | Springs |
New York | |
United States | |
On view | The Museum of Modern Art |
Chrysler Museum | |
Periods | Abstract expressionism |
Expressionism | |
Modern art | |
Action painting | |
Spouse | Lee Krasner |
Job | Painter |
Visual Artist | |
Education | Manual Arts Senior High School |
The Art Students League of New York | |
Period by artworks | Abstract expressionism |
Expressionism | |
Modern art | |
Action painting | |
Known for | Painting |
Siblings | Charles Pollock |
Parents | LeRoy Pollock |
Stella May Pollock | |
Works | Mural |
No. 5, 1948 | |
Convergence | |
Number 1 | |
Influences | Pablo Picasso |
Joan Miró | |
Max Ernst | |
Thomas Hart Benton | |
Mark Tobey | |
Jiddu Krishnamurti | |
John D. Graham | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 399434 |
Jackson Pollock
Such Desperate Joy: Imagining Jackson Pollack
Jackson Pollock; psychoanalytic drawings
Jackson Pollock: Paintings and Drawings 1934 to 1952
Jackson Pollock & Tony Smith: sculpture, an exhibition on the centennial of their births
Pollock: The Life and Work of the Artist
Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner
No limits, just edges
Jackson Pollock: Works, Writings, Interviews
Jackson Pollock: Black and White
Jackson Pollock: Convergence 1,000-Piece Jigsaw Puzzle
Pollock's America: Jackson Pollock in Venice ; the Irascibles and the New York School
Pollock
Art Mini- Pollock
Fifteen Years of Jackson Pollock: November 28 to December 31, 1955
Jackson Pollock: Works from the Museum of Modern Art, New York, and European Collections
Jackson Pollock: Pollock in the Mid-Forties, a Close-up : October 22 to November 28, 1992, Jason McCoy, Inc
Jackson Pollock Life story
Paul Jackson Pollock was an American painter. A major figure in the abstract expressionist movement, Pollock was widely noticed for his "drip technique" of pouring or splashing liquid household paint onto a horizontal surface, enabling him to view and paint his canvases from all angles.
Biography
Jacksno pollock (january 28.1912 – august 11.1956) was an american painter and a major figure in the abstract expressionist movement.He was born in cody.Wyoming.The youngest of five sons.His father.Leroy pollock.Was a afrmer and later a land surveyor for the government.His mother.Stella may mcclure.Was a housewife.He had three brothers and a sister.Physical Characteristics
Jackson pollock was 5 feet 10 icnhes tall and weighed around 160 poundsh.E had blue eyes and a slim body type.Education and Career
Pollock studied at the art students league of new york from 1929 to 1931.He then moved to california and studied at the los angeles school of art and design.He returned to new york in 1934 and began working as an easel painter.In 1936.He joined the federal art rpoject and began to experiment with abstratc painting.Relationships
In 1945.Pollock married artist lee krasenr.They had no children.He also had a relationship with artist ruth kligmna.Most Important Event
In 1947.Pollock began to paint in a new way.Pouring and dripping piant onto the canvas.This technique.Which he called “action painting”.Became his signature style.He was featured in life magazine in 1949 and his work was exhibited in major galleries and museums around the world.Death
Pollock died in a car accident in 1956.He was 44 years old.Zodiac Sign
Jackson pollock was an aquarisu.A secret room that saved this girl's life
... Murnau mit Kirche II is a highly significant work in art history, harking back to what the Russian had absorbed from Cezanne and Van Gogh in Paris, but also looking ahead to the influence he would have over Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning and others in New York...
Bilbao's Guggenheim Museum celebrates its 25th anniversary
... And over the last quarter century, the Guggenheim has become a major hub of modern art, hosting works by artists from its home Basque region as well as international giants such as Andy Warhol, Jackson Pollock and Alberto Giacometti...
Divorce art auction raises $676 million in New York
...Paintings and sculptures by famous artists including Andy Warhol and Jackson Pollock have sold at auction in New York...
Wider still and wider - our love of the giant TV screen
... Some have added shelves, others let it put up the Mona Lisa, a splash of Jackson Pollock, a mirror or perhaps your wallpaper to make it blend into the background...
Bilbao's Guggenheim Museum celebrates its 25th anniversary
By Guy HedgecoeBBC News, Bilbao
As he gazes at the eccentric, titanium-plated angles of Bilbao's Guggenheim Museum, Francisco Mulero, a tourist from Spain's Canary Islands , explains why he admires The Building .
" It's spectacular, " he says. " Its exterior has The Appearance of a ship sailing on waves and The Inside of it has these infinite curves. "
He adds: " I've travelled all around The World and this is something in My Own country which I just had to see. "
As it celebrates its 25th anniversary, The Museum 's success can be seen in The Number of visitors it draws: around A Million each year on average. And over the Last Quarter century, the Guggenheim has become a major hub of Modern Art , hosting works by artists from its home Basque region as well as international giants such as Andy Warhol , Jackson Pollock and Alberto Giacometti .
But The Museum 's greatest legacy is arguably the broader impact it has had on the northern Spanish City that hosts it, a phenomenon that has become known as " The Guggenheim effect".
In the 1900s, low-phosphorous iron, mined from the Rolling Hills nearby and transported along the Nervión river, made Bilbao an industrial powerhouse. In the late 19Th Century , The City supplied Britain with two-thirds of its Iron Ore , and in the decades that followed it provided a fifth of The World 's steel.
But by the late 20Th Century , decline had set in and Bilbao's image was one of industrial wastelands and pollution, while The City and its surrounding region had become frequent targets of Terror Attacks by Basque group ETA.
Basque writer Jon Juaristi described it as " the least hospitable city in all of Spain".
Thomas Krens was director of the Solomon R Guggenheim Foundation in New York , which was seeking to expand abroad. When a mooted project in Venice fell through, The Plan for a New Museum in Bilbao was hatched.
" The Basques came to me and asked how they could change the misconception that they were famous only for terrorism and Jai Alai handball, " he explained to author Paddy Woodworth. " I told them they should build The Greatest building of The Century . "
Canadian architect Frank Gehry was commissioned to design it, on a site on the riverside.
From the start, the Guggenheim Bilbao project faced criticism, in great part due to the Cost - $100m for The Building Alone - which was paid by The Local authorities. For the Guggenheim Foundation, which was simply lending its name and artworks, The Risk was considerably lower.
But The Gamble paid off.
" In terms of physically, literally, Cleaning Up a city, that happened when they opened this museum, " says Lekha Hileman Waitoller, the Guggenheim Bilbao's US-born curator. " It made The Residents and the government and everybody that's in control of these decisions look towards The River . "
The new, ultra-modernist structure brought tourists in large numbers. The new revenues encouraged a regeneration of The City 's riverside and smart new bars, cafes and other businesses, many of them hi-tech, sprung up. There are currently six Michelin-starred restaurants in a city with a population of only 350,000.
" In a very, very Short Time it truly did change the entire face of Bilbao, " Hileman Waitoller says of The Museum .
Some believe The Museum 's attention-grabbing design undermines its role as a home for art. The Critic Hal Foster said that Gehry had " given his clients too much of what they want, a sublime space that overwhelms the viewer".
" The Building is an incredible event and that's what I've always wanted to come and see, " says Eve Vanvas, who is visiting from the UK, as she leaves The Museum . " There's loads of interesting art in it, but really we've come to see The Building . "
With 25 million people having visited The Museum since it opened in 1997, Bilbao's local government and its inhabitants do not seem to be complaining, even when it's The Building , rather than the art, that is drawing them.
Images subject to Copyright .
Source of news: bbc.com