In 1932, Guston
and Pollock watched David Alfaro Siquieros paint his well-known
mural at Pomona College, and in 1936, Guston joined Pollock in
New York City where he worked in the mural painting division of
the Federal Art Project. In the early 1940’s, he held teaching
positions in the Mid-West, returning to New York in 1947.
Guston’s career spans fifty years. He began as a political
muralist, and by the early 1950’s was associated with the
second generation of Abstract Expressionists. He called his signature
style abstract impressionism, a style of irregular abstraction
with small brushstrokes of delicate color on a white field.
In the late 1960’s,
Guston returned to figurative painting. He developed a complex
and highly personal iconography including images of Ku Klux Klan
members, shoes, and bottles that are brightly and sometimes crudely
painted. Guston’s vision had become apocalyptic and fantastic
yet disquietingly comic.
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