Post-Painterly Abstraction
About
A term coined by art critic Clement Greenberg for the title of an exhibition he curated in 1964. Post-painterly abstraction encompasses a broad group of American painters who reacted to Abstract Expressionism, either through the pursuit of Hard-edge abstraction or by creating open compositions of washes and poured areas of color. Other hallmarks of this new generation of painters, according to Greenberg, were thinned-out paint, a lack of an identifiable artistic mark (as in Pollock’s “drips” and “skeins”), a focus on saturated and intense color, and a lack of interest in spontaneity.
Related Categories
Action Painting, Art Informel, Color Field Painting, Line, Form, and Color, Abstract Expressionism, Gestural, Contemporary Gestural Abstraction, Color Theory, Abstract Painting, Irregular Curvilinear Forms