{"id":1959768,"date":"2026-05-27T13:55:20","date_gmt":"2026-05-27T10:55:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/?p=1959768"},"modified":"2026-05-27T13:55:20","modified_gmt":"2026-05-27T10:55:20","slug":"jackson-pollock-abstract-expressionisms-tortured-american-master","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/?p=1959768","title":{"rendered":"Jackson Pollock: Abstract Expressionism&#8217;s Tortured American Master"},"content":{"rendered":"<p>[analyse_image type=&#8221;featured&#8221; src=&#8221;https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/jacksonpollock.jpg?w=1024&#8243;]<\/p>\n<div class=\"a-content a-content--offset lrv-a-floated-parent lrv-u-font-family-body lrv-u-line-height-normal lrv-u-font-size-18 lrv-u-position-relative\">\n<div class=\"pmc-paywall\">\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tLeaving aside the so-called drip paintings that made Jackson Pollock (1912\u20131956) the face of Abstract Expressionism, an argument could be made that, overall, he wasn\u2019t a particularly good artist. The period between 1947 and 1950, when Pollock produced his breakthrough abstractions, was bookended by years of kludgy attempts to, essentially, out-Picasso Picasso, a desire driven by kill-the-father ambition. According to his wife, the painter Lee Krasner, Pollock once shouted, \u201cGod damn it, that guy missed nothing!\u201d while throwing a catalog of Picasso\u2019s work across a room.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tWhatever his doubts about measuring up to Picasso, Pollock was instrumental in bringing a uniquely American form of modernist art out from under Europe\u2019s shadow. The audacity of works such as\u00a0<em>Lucifer<\/em>,\u00a0<em>Autumn Rhythm (Number 30)<\/em>, and\u00a0<em>Lavender Mist<\/em>\u00a0made them as indelible\u2014if not as easy to individuate\u2014as anything produced by the Spaniard. But Pollock could not put aside his crippling insecurities, which may account for the inconsistency of his output.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tPollock was an alcoholic, possibly closeted (though evidence of the latter is contestable), and like most drunks given to outbursts and dissolute behavior. One such incident\u2014urinating into the fireplace of New York art doyenne Peggy Guggenheim\u2014was likely made up by Guggenheim herself. Another\u2014getting behind the wheel in no condition to drive\u2014ended his life.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tWith the news that, earlier this month, Pollock\u2019s auction record was reset at $181.2 million, with the sale of the monumental drip painting <em>Number 7A, 1948<\/em> at Christie\u2019s, take a closer look at Pollock\u2019s life and career below.<\/p>\n<div id=\"pmc-gallery-vertical\">\n<div class=\"c-gallery-vertical-loader u-gallery-app-shell-loader\">\n<ul class=\"pmc-fallback-list-items lrv-a-unstyle-list lrv-u-margin-t-2\">\n<li class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item-wrap lrv-u-margin-b-2\">\n<article class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item\">\n<h2>The Postwar Context of Pollock\u2019s art<\/h2>\n<figure><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"268\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/numberone-pollock.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"NEW YORK, NY - DECEMBER 30: Viewers look at an abstract expressionist painting by artist Jackson Pollock titled &quot;One: Number 31, 1950&quot; on December 30, 2020 at the  Museum of Modern Art in New York City. Museum of Modern Art goers must now reserve their entrance tickets on-line for a specific day. (Photo by Robert Nickelsberg\/Getty Images)\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"268\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/numberone-pollock.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"NEW YORK, NY - DECEMBER 30: Viewers look at an abstract expressionist painting by artist Jackson Pollock titled &quot;One: Number 31, 1950&quot; on December 30, 2020 at the  Museum of Modern Art in New York City. Museum of Modern Art goers must now reserve their entrance tickets on-line for a specific day. (Photo by Robert Nickelsberg\/Getty Images)\"><figcaption>\n\t\t\t\t\tImage Credit: Getty Images\t\t\t\t<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<div class=\"pmc-paywall\">\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tJust as Jeff Koons is arguably the quintessential artist for the America of plutocratic decay, Pollock\u2019s art embodied another, more muscular version of the country at the end of World War II. A geopolitical and cultural hegemon shaking the dust of Hiroshima and Nagasaki from its boots, it was a giant nonetheless affected by the psychological costs of its victory, as well as by the onset of Cold War paranoia. In this respect, it\u2019s possible to discern a sort of collective PTSD echoing in Pollock\u2019s paintings.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tPollock was also one of the few members of Abstract Expressionism\u2019s inner circle who wasn\u2019t a Jew or an immigrant. Thanks to an Old West pedigree (he hailed from Cody, Wyoming) and craggy good looks, he became a sort of artistic projection of cowboy mythology, a capital-A American artist for a new American art promoted around the world.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tPollock took a performative approach to his work, putting his canvases on the floor and throwing his whole body into their facture. Defying centuries of easel tradition, he explosively channeled Abstract Expressionism\u2019s ethos of conveying the artist\u2019s inner life through the act of painting. Pollock\u2019s process also linked back to a concept inherited from Surrealism: automatism, which stipulated that conscious direction in art should be subordinate to the dictates of the subconscious mind. But contrary to conventional wisdom, Pollock\u2019s work wasn\u2019t random. It was a kind of calligraphy that relied as much on Apollonian twists of the wrist as it did on Dionysian flings of the arm\u2014a gestural chaos that was, in fact, carefully woven together.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/article>\n<\/li>\n<li class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item-wrap lrv-u-margin-b-2\">\n<article class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item\">\n<h2>Early Life and Education<\/h2>\n<figure><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"253\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/ArizonaDesert.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"LITTLEFIELD, ARIZONA  - APRIL 30: Green vegetation lines Kanab Creek, adding a contrast of color to the desert landscape seen from the air on April 30, 2026, near Littlefield, Arizona. The creek is one of many in the area that feed into the Colorado River. With a low snowpack this winter across the basin, many creeks and washes are nearly dry. The flight for aerial photography was provided by LightHawk. (Photo by RJ Sangosti\/MediaNews Group\/The Denver Post via Getty Images)\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"253\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/ArizonaDesert.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"LITTLEFIELD, ARIZONA  - APRIL 30: Green vegetation lines Kanab Creek, adding a contrast of color to the desert landscape seen from the air on April 30, 2026, near Littlefield, Arizona. The creek is one of many in the area that feed into the Colorado River. With a low snowpack this winter across the basin, many creeks and washes are nearly dry. The flight for aerial photography was provided by LightHawk. (Photo by RJ Sangosti\/MediaNews Group\/The Denver Post via Getty Images)\"><figcaption>\n\t\t\t\t\tImage Credit: Denver Post via Getty Images\t\t\t\t<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<div class=\"pmc-paywall\">\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tPollock moved with his family from Wyoming to San Diego when he was 10 months old and spent parts of his upbring in Arizona and Los Angeles. He was the youngest of five brothers, three of whom, Charles, Frank, and Sanford, would also become artists. His mother, Stella, encouraged Pollock\u2019s talents, though their relationship was emotionally fraught to the point of negatively affecting his future relationships with women. His father, Leroy, was a struggling rancher who became a land surveyor. An abusive alcoholic, he left the family when Pollock was nine.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tLeroy, however, kept in touch through letters, including one telling a 16-year-old Pollock that \u201cthe secret of success is concentrating interest in life,\u201d according to a 2012 article in <em>The Atlantic<\/em>. Then there was the probably apocryphal account of Pollock witnessing his father urinate on a rock, an incident that supposedly inspired his drip paintings. As a teenager, Pollock traveled with his father and Sanford on surveys across the Southwest. Along the way, Pollock was exposed to Native American culture and, more ominously, picked up his drinking habit.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tPollock\u2019s artistic training began as a teenager at the Manual Arts High School in Los Angeles, from which he was eventually expelled for his rebellious temperament. One of is instructors, the painter and illustrator Frederick John de St. Vrain Schwankovsky, acquainted Pollock with the latest currents in Europe, as well as with the metaphysical and occult tenets of theosophy, which would inform his subsequent interest in Carl Jung\u2019s theories of the subconscious.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/article>\n<\/li>\n<li class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item-wrap lrv-u-margin-b-2\">\n<article class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item\">\n<h2>A Student of Benton<\/h2>\n<figure><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"236\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/thomashartbenton.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"The Thomas Hart Benton mural &quot;Independence and the Opening of the West&quot; is a fixture in the lobby of the south entrance to the Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum in Independence. It depicts the role Independence played in changing the American West.\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"236\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/thomashartbenton.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"The Thomas Hart Benton mural &quot;Independence and the Opening of the West&quot; is a fixture in the lobby of the south entrance to the Harry S. Truman Presidential Library and Museum in Independence. It depicts the role Independence played in changing the American West.\"><figcaption>\n\t\t\t\t\tImage Credit: TNS\t\t\t\t<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<div class=\"pmc-paywall\">\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tIn 1930 Pollock, age 18, joined Charles, Frank, and Sanford at the Art Students League in New York. There, at Charles\u2019s urging, he began taking classes with Thomas Hart Benton, an artist whose renown as a mural painter would land him on the cover of <em>Time<\/em> magazine in 1934. Their pairing would become crucial to Pollock\u2019s lifework even as it seemed counterintuitive, given their divergent views on art.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tThe scion of a political dynasty from Missouri (his father served in the U.S. House of Representatives, and a great-great-uncle had been one of the state\u2019s first senators), Benton (1889\u20131975) was a leading light of American Regionalism, a figurative movement that embraced scenes of \u201cheartland\u201d life as a sort of visual analog to the Real American ideology that continues to reverberate with deleterious consequences today. Yet Benton was no white supremacist\u2014unlike his father\u2014and denounced racism throughout his life. Nevertheless, he was a self-declared \u201cenemy\u201d of modern art who went on to ridicule his pupil\u2019s future efforts as \u201cpaint-spilling .\u00a0.\u00a0. absurdities.\u201d (Pollock\u2019s opinion of Benton\u2014\u201cHe had come face-to-face with Michelangelo and lost\u201d\u2014was equally piquant.)<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tStill, Benton\u2019s practice impacted Pollock\u2019s in both scale and composition. Thanks to Benton, Pollock became familiar with Mexican muralists such as Diego Rivera and David Siqueiros and adopted the large formats that they and Benton used.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tPollock also learned from Benton\u2019s organization of pictorial space. Benton\u2019s figures were attenuated, like El Greco\u2019s, and arranged in groups that swirled dynamically one into the next. While this was intended to propel the narrative behind Benton\u2019s paintings, it created the same energetic flow of forms that would define Pollock\u2019s abstractions.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/article>\n<\/li>\n<li class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item-wrap lrv-u-margin-b-2\">\n<article class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item\">\n<h2>1933\u20131943<\/h2>\n<div class=\"pmc-paywall\">\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tPollock left the Art Students League in 1933, and the subsequent decade set the stage for his emergence as a force in postwar American art.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tHis first couple of years after leaving school were marked by poverty, forcing him to crash with Charles and his family in Greenwich Village. In 1935 Pollock began to receive funding through the WPA, the New Deal agency that commissioned paintings, sculptures, posters, and photographs from a host of American artists, many of whom would become famous. Pollock survived on WPA support for the next five years, producing a number of eclectic and awkward works.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tAmong them was <em>Going West<\/em> (c. 1934\u20131935), a small, syrup-colored canvas of a wagon train struggling up a mountain pass that was very much indebted to Benton. Its dark, moody tone also revealed a connection to the late-19th-century American painter Albert Pinkham Ryder (1847\u20131917). Ryder\u2019s dense, impastoed landscapes, seascapes, and nocturnes were known for a murky symbolism that Pollock shared in paintings such as <em>Male and Female<\/em> (c. 1942), which employed obscure numerology, and <em>Guardians of the Secret<\/em> (1943), which featured indecipherable glyphs. American Indian art factored into both paintings, as did the Jungian psychoanalysis Pollock was undergoing at the time to treat his alcoholism. The convergence of these elements undoubtedly stemmed from a visit he made with his therapist to a 1941 Museum of Modern Art exhibition on Native American art, where Pollock witnessed a demonstration by Navajo sand painters and their manner of working on the ground, which he\u2019d appropriate in due course.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/article>\n<\/li>\n<li class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item-wrap lrv-u-margin-b-2\">\n<article class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item\">\n<h2>Pollock and Picasso<\/h2>\n<figure><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"267\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/shewolf-pollock.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"A woman looks at the painting &apos;The She Wolf&apos; by US artist Jackson Pollock (1912-1956) during the installation of the exhibition &apos;Jackson Pollock, Les Premieres Annees (1934-1947)&apos; (Jackson Pollock: The Early Years (1934-1947) at the Picasso Museum in Paris, on October 9, 2024. The exhibition runs from October 15, 2024 to January 18, 2025. (Photo by ALAIN JOCARD \/ AFP) \/ RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY MENTION OF THE ARTIST UPON PUBLICATION - TO ILLUSTRATE THE EVENT AS SPECIFIED IN THE CAPTION (Photo by ALAIN JOCARD\/AFP via Getty Images)\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"267\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/shewolf-pollock.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"A woman looks at the painting &apos;The She Wolf&apos; by US artist Jackson Pollock (1912-1956) during the installation of the exhibition &apos;Jackson Pollock, Les Premieres Annees (1934-1947)&apos; (Jackson Pollock: The Early Years (1934-1947) at the Picasso Museum in Paris, on October 9, 2024. The exhibition runs from October 15, 2024 to January 18, 2025. (Photo by ALAIN JOCARD \/ AFP) \/ RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY MENTION OF THE ARTIST UPON PUBLICATION - TO ILLUSTRATE THE EVENT AS SPECIFIED IN THE CAPTION (Photo by ALAIN JOCARD\/AFP via Getty Images)\"><figcaption>\n\t\t\t\t\tImage Credit: AFP via Getty Images\t\t\t\t<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<div class=\"pmc-paywall\">\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tPicasso weighed heavily on Pollock\u2019s mind in the late 1930s and early \u201940s, which coincided with America\u2019s entry into World War II. New York\u2019s art scene was a sleepy, provincial backwater compared with Paris, but unlike the major cities of Europe, it was neither occupied nor bombed into rubble. Moreover, a wave of modernist painters, sculptors, and intellectuals had fled the Continent for New York City, among them Andr\u00e9 Breton, Marc Chagall, Salvador Dal\u00ed, Marcel Duchamp, Max Ernst, Fernand L\u00e9ger, Piet Mondrian, and Yves Tanguy. The Surrealists in their ranks had a particularly huge impact on New York\u2019s nascent avant-garde. By then Picasso had entered his own Surrealist phase, and it was this chapter in his oeuvre that became the windmill Pollock tilted against.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tHe did so with <em>Male and Female<\/em> and <em>Guardians<\/em> as well a third painting, <em>The She-Wolf<\/em> (1943). Despite the title, its subject was less lupine than bovine, sporting the massive haunches and impressive horns of a bull, an animal that figured prominently in Picasso\u2019s art but also in another Pollock obsession\u2014prehistoric cave painting. Ultimately, as longtime patron Peggy Guggenheim observed in her memoirs, Pollock \u201covercame [Picasso\u2019s] influence, to become .\u00a0.\u00a0. the greatest painter since Picasso,\u201d at least for a while.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/article>\n<\/li>\n<li class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item-wrap lrv-u-margin-b-2\">\n<article class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item\">\n<h2>Pollock and Lee Krasner<\/h2>\n<figure><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"262\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/GettyImages-56898384.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"Four people and a dog in an art studio with large paintings around.\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"262\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/02\/GettyImages-56898384.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"Four people and a dog in an art studio with large paintings around.\"><figcaption>\n\t\t\t\t\tImage Credit: Photo by Tony Vaccaro\/Getty Images\t\t\t\t<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<div class=\"pmc-paywall\">\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tGuggenheim was one of several important figures in Pollock\u2019s life, but none were more consequential than Lee Krasner (1908\u20131984). Though her paintings have since been reassessed as being equal to her husband\u2019s, she stayed in the background, content to be the driving force behind Pollock while he was alive and the keeper of his flame after he died. Yet she never felt subsumed by his needs: \u201cIt is a two-way affair,\u201d she once said. \u201cI would give anything to have someone giving me what I was able to give Pollock.\u201d Krasner was there at every point of his development, steering him in the right direction.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tOne such juncture occurred in 1943 and involved Guggenheim. She\u2019d commissioned a large-scale work from Pollock that year for the foyer of a townhouse on East 61st Street in Manhattan, where she rented an apartment after separating from her husband, the painter Max Ernst. It was Krasner who\u2019d gotten Pollock the job through her acquaintance with Howard Putzel, Guggenheim\u2019s primary art adviser along with Marcel Duchamp. The result, a 23-by-6-foot affair titled <em>Mural<\/em>, proved to be the most important inflection point of Pollock\u2019s career.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tAs with many instances in Pollock\u2019s life and art, the creation of <em>Mural<\/em> is surrounded by legend, including the fireplace incident, which allegedly happened during a party after the painting\u2019s completion (a further embellishment has it that Pollock was nude at the time). Another story\u2014propagated by Guggenheim and Krasner\u2014claims that Pollock limned <em>Mural<\/em> in a single night, a contention later refuted by image analysis. Similarly, while Duchamp did suggest that <em>Mural<\/em> be painted on canvas instead of directly on the wall to make it movable, he most certainly didn\u2019t trim it by eight inches in order to make it fit the space. <em>Mural<\/em> was already on a stretcher frame when it was delivered, a fact easily provable by a photo of Pollock in his studio in front of <em>Mural<\/em> in progress, leaned against a wall with its edge secured by nails. Done with oil and casein in a palette of black, white, blue, gray, yellow and pink, <em>Mural<\/em> was Pollock\u2019s most important piece outside of the drip paintings, prefiguring them in some ways. <em>Mural<\/em> featured splashes, splotches, and dribbles of pigment, though these had turned up in Pollock\u2019s previous works. Its composition evoked elongated figures that were somehow reminiscent of both Picasso and Benton. But more important, these shapes blended into an all-over procession that tipped <em>Mural <\/em>into pure abstraction.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/article>\n<\/li>\n<li class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item-wrap lrv-u-margin-b-2\">\n<article class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item\">\n<h2>Peggy Guggenheim and Art of this Century<\/h2>\n<figure><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"313\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/peggyguggenheim.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"(Original Caption) Peggy Guggenheim(standing), well known American society girl who recently joined the ranks of young American business women in Paris, opened a lamp shop with the famous British artist, Mina Loy, in the heart of the French Capital. (Photo by George Rinhart\/Corbis via Getty Images)\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"313\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/peggyguggenheim.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"(Original Caption) Peggy Guggenheim(standing), well known American society girl who recently joined the ranks of young American business women in Paris, opened a lamp shop with the famous British artist, Mina Loy, in the heart of the French Capital. (Photo by George Rinhart\/Corbis via Getty Images)\"><figcaption>\n\t\t\t\t\tImage Credit: Corbis via Getty Images\t\t\t\t<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<div class=\"pmc-paywall\">\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tHeiress to a New York mining fortune, Guggenheim (1898\u20131979) moved to Paris in 1920, where she was introduced to the city\u2019s avant-garde by Marcel Duchamp. She began collecting with an eye toward Surrealism, and in 1938 she opened a gallery in London. Duchamp helped to organize exhibitions there and remained Guggenheim\u2019s consigliere after she returned to New York in 1941.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tIn 1942 Guggenheim opened Art of this Century on West 57th Street in Manhattan. It was partially a showcase for her collection and partially devoted to American modernists. A first-of-its kind survey of female artists there presented Leonora Carrington, Frida Kahlo, Louise Nevelson, and most surprisingly Gypsy Rose Lee, the famed burlesque star and part-time painter.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tPollock showed there as well and was provided an annual stipend, but his work didn\u2019t sell. He indulged in bouts of heavy drinking, leading Krasner to decide that they should leave the distractions of New York\u2019s art world. In 1945 they moved to Long Island, and over the next several years, Pollock experienced a period of sobriety whose output would write him into art history.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/article>\n<\/li>\n<li class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item-wrap lrv-u-margin-b-2\">\n<article class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item\">\n<h2>The Springs and the Drip Paintings<\/h2>\n<figure><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"269\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/pollock-iniran.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"A female exhibition organizer, fully covered in black, views &apos;Mural On Indian Red Ground&apos;, by American abstract expressionist painter Jackson Pollock, at the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art, September 1999. (Photo by Kaveh Kazemi\/Getty Images)\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"269\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/pollock-iniran.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"A female exhibition organizer, fully covered in black, views &apos;Mural On Indian Red Ground&apos;, by American abstract expressionist painter Jackson Pollock, at the Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art, September 1999. (Photo by Kaveh Kazemi\/Getty Images)\"><figcaption>\n\t\t\t\t\tImage Credit: Getty Images\t\t\t\t<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<div class=\"pmc-paywall\">\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tPollock and Krasner moved to a house at 830 Springs-Fireplace Road in Springs, East Hampton, which they\u2019d purchased with a $2,000 down payment from Guggenheim. Unlike today\u2019s playground for the rich, East Hampton back then was rural, and the property had been a farmstead with a small barn that became Pollock\u2019s studio.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tThe barn\u2019s interior was barely large enough to accommodate the canvases Pollock rolled out onto the floor, restricting him to working along a shallow perimeter between the walls and the painting. In winter he could work just a couple of hours each day, since the space was unheated.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tPollock used household enamel diluted to a syrupy consistency, using stirring sticks as tools along with brushes. Thinned pigments and drips weren\u2019t exactly new: Whistler had used a washy concoction he labeled \u201csauce,\u201d while Max Ernst had developed a technique called oscillation in which he hung a paint-filled can above a canvas, swinging it back and forth as pigment trickled through a hole punched in the bottom. There was also the little-remembered, self-taught painter Janet Sobel, who in the late 1930s adopted a sort of DIY method of automatism, resulting in all-over compositions of dribbles and whorls that were also painted with enamel. According to the art critic Clement Greenberg, Pollock was familiar with one such work, titled <em>Milky Way<\/em> (1945).<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tPollock, however, took his compositions to heights that were far more intentional, sustained, and expansive than anything by Sobel or anyone else. Still, they weren\u2019t entirely abstract: Pollock applied paint in layers that, as infrared photography would later uncover, contained sketchy images of humans and animals, as well as ideographs of his own invention. Pollock\u2019s abstractions, in other words, were representational sandwiches.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tPollock debuted his drip paintings at the Betty Parsons Gallery in 1948, and like his earlier canvases, they didn\u2019t sell. They were also mocked in print: One article in the August 8, 1949, issue of <em>Life Magazine<\/em> was published under the headline \u201cIs Jackson Pollock the Greatest Living Painter in the United States?\u201d The question was meant to be negatively rhetorical, but the accompanying color photographs of Pollock and his work by Arnold Newman were so compelling that what was meant to be a takedown vaulted him to fame. This success proved to be too much for Pollock, initiating a period of personal and artistic decline.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tAlthough Arnold Newman\u2019s images for <em>Life <\/em>minted Pollock\u2019s celebrity, another photographer, Hans Namuth (1915\u20131990), became nearly as prominent as Pollock himself by capturing the artist in action. In 1950 Namuth contacted Pollock about documenting him while painting in his studio, and once again, Krasner was indispensable to making it happen. The project yielded some 500 photographs as well as two films, including one shot from the underside of a sheet of Plexiglas as Pollock applied paint overhead. <\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tIronically, Namuth wound up demystifying Pollock\u2019s ostensibly spontaneous execution by showing how deliberate it actually was. Pollock understood how this revelation ran counter to the public image that Krasner and Guggenheim had fostered of him, prompting a fight with Namuth in which each called the other a phony. During the confrontation, Pollock fell off the wagon by pouring himself a drink, thus ending the most productive phase of his career.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/article>\n<\/li>\n<li class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item-wrap lrv-u-margin-b-2\">\n<article class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item\">\n<h2>Clement Greenberg<\/h2>\n<figure><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"300\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/GettyImages-837989358.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"MAY 5 1977, 5-10-1977 Greenberg, Clement - Ind Writer Credit: Denver Post (Denver Post via Getty Images)\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"300\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/GettyImages-837989358.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"MAY 5 1977, 5-10-1977 Greenberg, Clement - Ind Writer Credit: Denver Post (Denver Post via Getty Images)\"><figcaption>\n\t\t\t\t\tImage Credit: Denver Post via Getty Images\t\t\t\t<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<div class=\"pmc-paywall\">\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tAnother figure essential to Pollock\u2019s rise was the art critic Clement Greenberg (1909\u20131994). Greenberg wielded a power over the postwar New York art scene that would be scarcely imaginable today, when art has become a fungible commodity controlled by the global 1 percent. By contrast, Greenberg advocated for Abstract Expressionism as a way of resisting the commercialization of art. That conceit pretty much went out the window with Pollock\u2019s public notoriety, but he\u2019d championed the artist\u2019s work well before Pollock achieved acclaim. One might note that it worked both ways, as Greenberg\u2019s fame grew with Pollock\u2019s. Far from being a steadfast proponent of Pollock, however, Greenberg abandoned him once the latter began to unravel.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/article>\n<\/li>\n<li class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item-wrap lrv-u-margin-b-2\">\n<article class=\"pmc-fallback-list-item\">\n<h2>Late Work and Death<\/h2>\n<figure><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"267\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/bluepoles.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"LONDON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 20: A member of staff poses next to a painting by U.S artist Jackson Pollock entitled &apos;Blue Poles&apos; at the Royal Academy of Arts on September 20, 2016 in London, England. Forming part of the &apos;Abstract Expressionism&apos; exhibition, it is due to be displayed from September 24, 2016 to January 2, 2017. (Photo by Carl Court\/Getty Images)\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"400\" height=\"267\" src=\"https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/bluepoles.jpg?w=400\" class=\"attachment-medium size-medium\" alt=\"LONDON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 20: A member of staff poses next to a painting by U.S artist Jackson Pollock entitled &apos;Blue Poles&apos; at the Royal Academy of Arts on September 20, 2016 in London, England. Forming part of the &apos;Abstract Expressionism&apos; exhibition, it is due to be displayed from September 24, 2016 to January 2, 2017. (Photo by Carl Court\/Getty Images)\"><figcaption>\n\t\t\t\t\tImage Credit: Getty Images\t\t\t\t<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<div class=\"pmc-paywall\">\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tDuring the last six years of his life, Pollock reintroduced figuration into his work; this itself wouldn\u2019t be a problem, except that once again he reached for Picasso, especially in his series of known as the black paintings. These included straight up reinterpretations of Picasso masterpieces like <em>Girl Before a Mirror<\/em> done in meandering lines. Elsewhere, image fragments would play peek-a-boo out of abstracted fields of brush marks. In <em>Ocean Greyness<\/em> (1953), for example, eyeballs seemed to float in a turbid soup of the titular color.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tThough attempts have been made to critically rehabilitate such works, they simply do not measure up Pollock\u2019s drip\u2014or even pre-drip\u2014efforts. In 1952, however, Pollock did rally to create the last of his drip works, <em>Blue Poles<\/em>. Distinguished by dark parallel lines arrayed in a syncopated row against slashes of orange and yellow, it looked like a forest on fire.<\/p>\n<p class=\"paragraph larva \/\/ lrv-u-margin-lr-auto  lrv-a-font-body-m   \">\n\tIn 1955 Pollock made his last two paintings, <em>Search<\/em> and <em>Scent<\/em>, and in the second, one can almost make out a figure with its mouth open, consumed by a conflagration of thickly applied paint strokes. It\u2019s tempting to see it as a self-portrait of Pollock in the throes of self-immolation, but that\u2019s probably overthinking it. In real life, though, he was in the midst of destroying everything around him, drinking heavily and taking up with another woman, Ruth Klinger, which ended his marriage to Krasner. On August 11, 1956, riding with Klinger and another passenger, Edith Metzger, Pollock ran his Oldsmobile off the road less than a mile from his home. Klinger survived; Metzer and Pollock\u2014remaining emotionally crippled to the end\u2014did not.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/article>\n<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p>[analyse_source url=&#8221;https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/list\/art-news\/artists\/jackson-pollock-abstract-expressionism-drip-paintings-1234787419\/&#8221;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>[analyse_image type=&#8221;featured&#8221; src=&#8221;https:\/\/www.artnews.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/05\/jacksonpollock.jpg?w=1024&#8243;] Leaving aside the so-called drip paintings that made Jackson Pollock (1912\u20131956) the face of Abstract Expressionism, an argument could be made that, overall, he wasn\u2019t a particularly good artist. The period between 1947 and 1950, when Pollock produced his breakthrough abstractions, was bookended by years of kludgy attempts to, essentially, out-Picasso Picasso, [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[2],"tags":[61,226],"class_list":["post-1959768","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-politics","tag-artnews-com","tag-crawlmanager"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1959768","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=1959768"}],"version-history":[{"count":0,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/1959768\/revisions"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=1959768"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=1959768"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/analyse.optim.biz\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=1959768"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}