Curators Tracey Bashkoff and Megan Fontanella discuss key artists and works from the exhibition Art of Another Kind: International Abstraction and the Guggenheim, 1949–1960, and the development of the Guggenheim collection.
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Tracey Bashkoff, Curator, Collections and Exhibitions: This exhibition Art of Another Kind is drawn from the collection of the Solomon R Guggenheim Museum and features largely a number of works that [director James Johnson] Sweeney collected in the 1950s but also goes through to the present day and actually includes works that were collected even just this year. It covers a period from 1949, which is the year that Solomon [R. Guggenheim] passed away, to 1960, which was when James Johnson Sweeney left the museum as director.
Megan Fontanella, Assistant
Curator, Collections and Provenance:
James
Johnson Sweeney really championed the artists he called the “tastebreakers” of
his time, those who break open and enlarge our artistic frontiers. These
artists who perhaps disregard current vogue standards of taste and produce art
that maybe is not acceptable today, but will be acceptable tomorrow. I think
that’s really a wonderful idea that you cannot always follow the prevailing
norm, and in this period you see so many artists embracing diversity,
individuality, the so-called art of another kind. With the exhibition’s title,
we were really inspired by this 1952 book and accompanying exhibition that
French art critic Michel Tapié authored and organized and this idea of un art autre, or art of another kind—this
break with traditional notions of composition and this movement toward
something wholly other.
The exhibition includes both paintings and sculpture from the
1950s, from artists exploring abstraction in both the United States and primarily
Europe, but it also includes artists that were immigrating to these
international art centers. So you have Kenzo Okada coming to New York, José Guererro,
a Spanish artist as well. It’s really this wonderful moment of international
exchange and this dialogue on abstraction.
For
instance, the Cobra movement emerges in this period, its artists including
Asger Jorn, Karel Appel, Pierre Alechinsky, and
those artists are working out of Copenhagen, Amsterdam, and Brussels, which
gives the movement its name. In Italy you have Alberto Burri forming the Gruppo
Origine. In 1951, you have Art Informel emerging under the banner of the School
of Paris (École de Paris) in the postwar period, leading artists including
George Mathieu, Pierre Soulages, Zao Wou-Ki.
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The more experimental trends in art were initially in danger in
the postwar period because of the more conservative trends and this kind of
fear, I think, of abstractionists being perhaps subversive. And in 1948 then–Art
Institute of Chicago director Daniel Catton Rich published an article that
called for a so-called “freedom of the brush,” and this idea that artists
should be free to embrace any kind of style that they choose to, whether that’s
abstraction or something more representationally based. I think it really paved
the way in the 1950s for artists to feel more confident in exploring avant-garde,
experimental, in many ways radical trends.
I
think one has to remember that the 1950s are very much a period of social and
political anxiety and tension. You are also coming out of World War II, ending
in 1945, with that, memories of Nazism and this fear of the spread of
Communism, with the Soviet Union becoming a major power player in the postwar
period. So in this really tense political climate, there was very much this
concern that artists were not being allowed to embrace the freedom of the
brush, that a period of conservatism would ensue. I think one of the most
prominent manifestations or contradictions to that fear was the 1950 so-called modern
manifesto that the Whitney Museum [of American Art in New York], the Institute
of Contemporary Art in Boston, and the Museum of Modern Art in New York
collectively issued, stating that artists can pursue whatever style he or she
so chooses and that art would be international in its focus and kind of this
return to international exchange. And the manifesto really sought to affirm
that experimental art wasn’t subversive and that abstraction in particular in
all its various forms, ranging from the more representational to the completely
abstract, should thrive and should grow. In the 1950s there’s a movement toward
greater international exchange and openness.
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The
exhibition really illustrates the diversity of artists working in this period,
so artists pursuing very individual styles, even if by the end of the decade
many of the New York–based artists get grouped together under this term “Abstract
Expressionism.” You also see many artists working outside of their native
countries. For instance, you have American artists Ellsworth Kelly and Sam
Francis working in Paris for large periods of time; similarly in New York,
which in the postwar period emerged as this really vibrant art scene. You also
have artists that are moving back and forth quite a bit. So for instance,
Italian artist Afro Basaldella comes to New York in the 1950s for frequent
exhibitions of his work and really encounters the New York art scene, in
particular Willem de Kooning, who later in 1959 spends the winter working in Afro’s
studio. You also have Antoni Tàpies coming to New York from Spain, so it’s
really a wonderful moment of exchange and dialogue on contemporary art.
What
emerges in the 1950s is this idea of very much embracing the individual, so the
artist as this pioneering solitary person. I think part of that is also the
fear of group identity in this period is kind of underlying that, but also
coming out of World War II and Nazism and all of the trauma and devastation of
that time, there’s this interest in reclaiming the humanity and individuality
that perhaps had been lost or somewhat blurred during World War II.
Regardless
of this interest in individuality, you do see moments of artists coming
together, so for instance in New York at the Club, which in the 1950s was kind
of this informal assembly of avant-garde artists that was not only painters and
sculptors, but also dancers, musicians, critics, people who were just
interested in avant-garde art.
Bashkoff:
This
exhibition Art of Another Kind speaks
to the institutional history of the museum in the 1950s as well as the art
scene of the 1950s. The diversity of artists and the methods that they were
working in is really evident as you go through the exhibition. You see not only
differences between the different cities and countries that artists were
working in but [also] the differences in materials and the multiplicity of
styles that artists were engaged in at the time.
Fontanella:
I
think this exhibition is a testament that Sweeney’s notion of the so-called
tastebreakers really won out in the end because so many of these artists that
at the time were perhaps younger or emerging or more radical and experimental
provided some of the most vital art from the 1950s.
In
1953, Sweeney really aptly summarized the postwar prognosis when he said, and I
quote, “Yesterday is not quite out of sight; tomorrow is not yet in view. But
the atmosphere of vitality is unquestionable.”