A
first generation
member of the New York School of Abstract Expressionism, Richard
Pousette-Dart was included in many of their earliest exhibitions
including at the Peggy Guggenheim Art of this Century Gallery
in New York, the Venice Biennale in 1948 and the Museum of Modern
Art's 1949 exhibition, "Contemporary American Painters."
During the early 1950s,
his work received much praise when Abstract Expressionism was
at the height of its popularity. "He was also included in
the infamous Life Magazine 'Irascibles' group photograph of the
New York School, an image that would forever link him with that
group of mid-century painters in New York that changed the course
of the artworld."
Richard Pousette-Dart
was born in St. Paul, Minnesota and was largely self taught as
an artist, although he learned from his father, artist and writer
Nathaniel Pousette-Dart. He graduated from the Scarborough School,
Scarborough-on-Hudson, New York in 1935, and the next year attended
Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York.
In the late 1930s,
he developed a clean-edged style combining Cubist shapes with
Surreal imagery. And then in the 1940s, his canvases became biomorphic
and cluttered and moved into Abstract Expressionism with work
that focused on philosophical issues such as the hidden meaning
of life. For him, it was a turning away from process-oriented
gestural painting. Expressing his new frame of mind, he said:
"Art is always mystical in its final meaning. . . Painting
is a spark from an invisible, pointless central fire." (Herskovic
266)
Richard Pousette-Dart
was also an art educator, holding teaching positions in New York
City at the New School for Social Research (1959 to 1961); the
School of Visual Arts in New York City (1964); Columbia University
(1968 to 1969); Art Students League (1980-1981); and in Bronxville,
New York at Sarah Lawrence College (1970-1974).
|