Hofmann, Hans, 1880-1966

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Hans Hofmann (1880-1966) was a painter and teacher in Provincetown, Mass.

From the description of Hans Hofmann papers, [ca. 1904]-1978 (bulk 1945-1965). (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 82551474

Painter, teacher.

From the description of Hans Hofmann letter to Mrs. Spingarn, 1938 Dec. 18. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 122389762

Biography

Hans Hofmann created a distinctive primordial world of color and light. He realized that in painting, unlike in nature, cause and effect are reversed: on canvas, color creates light. Hofmann wrote, "Every color emanates a very characteristic light," and the special luminosity and radiance of his paintings are proof of his claim.

Along with other painters of his generation, Hofmann moved from representational and narrative paintings towards abstraction, where the basic elements of a picture-space, line, color, light, scale, shape, and texture-assert themselves as the primary aspects of a work. Abstraction does not mean, however, the disavowal of the human touch. In our culture, almost everything around us, visual imagery included, is produced by technologies that do not require human intervention. Painting (and sculpture) are the last handmade objects, and Hofmann makes certain that we are aware of this in his art. He is truly Homo Faber, Man the Maker, composing and controlling what we see and letting us know how he has made it. He creates agitated textures and vibrating surfaces by poking and prodding the pigment, making the paint ooze, and sometimes caressing the surface lightly with a loaded brush. Whether Hofmann splashes paint onto the canvas, or brushes it in heavy impasto, he turns the surface into a seemingly living witness to his manipulation of paint.

Hofmann lived to be 86 years old, and his biography reads like a capsule version of the history of twentieth-century art . Born in 1880 in a small town near Munich, he attended school in the Bavarian capital, which at the time was a sparkling center of culture, home to Thomas Mann, Richard Strauss, and Lovis Corinth. Wassily Kandinsky, who arrived there in 1886, called Munich a"spiritual island." Although Hofmann had scientific talent and had made a number of useful inventions while still in his teens, he decided upon art school, and moved to Paris in 1904. For ten years, he immersed himself in the artistic life of the city whose artists- Picasso, Braque, Gris, Matisse, and others-changed the history of art. In 1905, he witnessed the color explosions of Matisse and the Fauves at the Salon d'Automne. He sketched beside Matisse, and became a close friend of the Cubists' great colorist, Robert Delaunay. Though none of the paintings from his Paris period survive, it was there that Hofmann developed his influential theories.

Hofmann was also very much aware of Franz Marc and Kandinsky in Munich, where he returned at the outbreak of World War 1. There, in 1915, he opened his own art school. Before long, it achieved an interna-tional reputation as the place to learn new approaches to painting, and attracted, among others, young American students such as Louise Nevelson and Alfred Jensen.

Destined to play a critical for the University Art Museum was another of Hofmann's American students, Worth Ryder. Ryder, who later became chairman of the Art Department at UC Berkeley, invited Hofmann to teach at Berkeley in the summer of 1930. Another of his students, Glenn Wessels, accompanied Hofmann to Berkeley and served as his interpreter and the first translator of his theoretical writings. Hofmann came back to Berkeley the following summer. In 1931, the California Palace of the Legion of Honor in San Francisco gave him his first solo exhibition since the one held in Berlin in 1910.

In appreciation of his time in Berkeley and in response to his close contact with his former students,over three decades later-in 1963 -Hofmann made the substantial gift to the University of California of fortyseven paintings and funds towards housing them. This generous gift, accepted by the Regents of the University on the enthusiastic recommendation of President Clark Kerr, became a compelling reason to hasten the construction of the museum building itself. As the founding director of the new museum, I was privileged to assist Professor Erle Loran, another of Hofmann's former students, in selecting pictures from Hofmann's studio for the collection.

By the summer of 1931, Hofmann was well aware of the danger Nazism posed to artists and intellectuals, and decided to remain in this country. He took a teaching position at the Art Students League in New York, where a year later he again opened his own school. His combina-tion of modern art theory and the freedom he granted his students made Hofmann arguably the most important art teacher in the United States during the 1930s and 1940s-the years when this country assumed preeminence in art. For art students in America, he offered exposure to the latest advances in European art from someone who had firsthand knowledge of both Picasso and Matisse. Among his students were the painters Burgoyne Diller, Helen Frankenthaler, Lee Krasner, and Larry Rivers. There were also the artists who later invented the "Happening"- Allen Kaprow and Red Grooms. And there was the most important critic of his day, Clement Greenberg, who derived much of his formalist theory-that painting defines itself by its own purely visual properties of flatness, shape, and color-from Hofmann's teachings.

An early painting in the collection, Table with Fruit and Coffeepot (1936), gives an idea of Hofmann's work at this time. Bold, even brash, this picture pushes the color rhythms of Matisse and the Fauves to a new intensity (at first glance there seems to be too much red). Having absorbed the structural lessons of Cezanne and Cubism, Hofmann here loosens form to let color determine structure. Color creates space as well: the visually advancing and receding colors are basic to his often-cited "push-pull" principle, whereby a visual back and forth in space results from forms and colors reacting to one another.

When the Surrealists fled Europe during World War II and settled in New York, Hofmann had the chance to re-evaluate their work, along with Picasso's. He created paintings such as Idolatress 1 (1944), a grotesque and ferocious Dionysiac female figure. In paintings such as The Wind (about 1942) and Fantasia (about 1943), he experimented with the spontaneous invention and automatic response of the Surrealists with a free flow of random drips and spatters resulting in calligraphic webs of paint. Similarly, Effervescence (1944) consists of pools of pigment poured and dripped onto the canvas with little premeditation. By welcoming chance effects, Hofmann introduced the aesthetic of controlled accident into his work and his teaching.

This new approach to the picture plane-using free and intuitive methods depending largely on the gestural energy of the artist-replaced the Cubist grid to such an extent that Hofmann's work of the early 1940s foreshadows Jackson Pollock's technique of dripping paint on the canvas. It may even have exerted a direct impact on the younger artist. After experimenting with the drip technique, Hofmann proceeded to other explorations, such as imprinting his own hand onto a canvas of freely painted color blotches ( The Third Hand, 1947). With this symbolic as well as very immediate gesture, he brought the interaction between artist and medium into highly active discourse. The term "Abstract Expressionist" was, in fact, first applied to the work of an American painter when Hofmann's work was shown at Betty Parsons' Mortimer Brandt Gallery in 1946.

In his works of the 1950s, Hofmann reasserted his European modern sources: Fauvism, with its brilliant color, and Cubism, with its planar structure. In a picture such as Scintillating Space (1954), he joins his earlier use of oversized, pointillist flecks with large, clearly structured color rectangles, creating a pulsating texture of accented brushstrokes that seem to contradict the flat planes of pure color. The result is an almost voluptuous equilibrium of color and form. With paintings like Morning Mist (1958), Equinox (1958), Indian Summer (1959), Goliath (1960), Magnum Opus (1962), Sanctum Sanctorum (1962), and his largest work, the monumental Combinable Wall I and II (1961), Hofmann continued in this mode of combining hard-edge, oblong forms with reckless, loosely brushed areas. He created a visual tension between impulsive gestural areas and floating geometric forms. Rectangles seem to advance and recede against the ground, inducing a dynamic back and forth in space that epitomizes Hofmann's "push-pull." In a way, Hofmann produced a synthesis of Fauvism and Cubism. Or, in terms of the younger generation of American artists, a synthesis of the gestural painting of Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock, and Franz Kline, and the color-field painting of Clyfford Still, Mark Rothko, and Barnett Newman.

Unlike most of the New York painters, however, Hofmann did not work in series nor cultivate a single, signature style. Each painting was a new discovery. Some paintings, like The Prey (1956), lack all geometric form and consist instead of freely painted blasts and splashes. Yet in this work, spontaneous passages seem to form a target-like configuration on the lower left and a bird with a huge wing on the right. The images could not have been premeditated. Hofmann told the critic Harold Rosenberg when discussing this picture, "For this you need to be in the rarest of states." In the Wake of the Hurricane (1960), another unequivocally Abstract Expressionist work, recalls by its title the flotsam and jetsam deposited on a beach after a storm on Cape Cod, where Hofmann spent summers teaching from 1935 onward. It is revealing of Hofmann's experimental approach that this spontaneously painted picture appears in the same year as the thoughtfully structured Goliath, and just a year before the thinly painted, monochromatic Agrigento.

A strong binary aspect runs throughout Hofmann's work: a synthesis of the age-old contrast between Apollonian and Dionysiac, classical and romantic, disciplined and intuitive, rational and impulsive. Such forces are made visible, palpable, in Hofmann's coherent and ohen brilliant amalgam of force and counterforce, of "push and pull."

In the last years of his long career, Hofmann slowed down not at all. He alternated between making heavy, painterly works such as And Thunderclouds Pass (1961 ) or Gloriamundi (1963), and pictures where paint is applied sparingly and geometric forms are relinquished altogether. Paintings like The Bat (1964) and Maiden Dance (1964) suggest a lighthearted sense of airy openness and delight. On the occasion of the Hofmann retrospective in 1963 at the Museum of Modern Art in New York, my former colleague there, William C. Seitz, spoke of "the beauty, the profundity and monumentality" of Hofmann's paintings and, above all, of "the purpose for which they were painted-delectation." It is this affirmation of the joy of existence that we discover in Hans Hofmann's work, and that, along with his formal explorations, has inspired and challenged countless artists. With its collection of works by Hans Hofmann, the University Art Museum plans to keep his powerful vision before the eyes of generations of artists to come.

Peter Selz Professor Emeritus University of California at Berkeley

From the guide to the Hans Hofmann Collection, (Berkeley Art Museum/Pacific Film Archive)

Archival Resources
Role Title Holding Repository
creatorOf Hofmann, Hans, 1880-1966. Artist file. Brooklyn Museum Libraries & Archives
creatorOf University of California, Berkeley. University Art Museum. University of California, Berkeley, University Art Museum collection of Hans Hofmann papers, 1929-1976. UC Berkeley Libraries
creatorOf Clement Greenberg papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Herman Rodnick papers on Hans Hofmann Archives of American Art
creatorOf Hofmann, Hans, 1880-1966. [Hofmann lectures / Hans Hofmann]. University of Minnesota, Minneapolis
referencedIn André Emmerich Gallery records Archives of American Art
referencedIn Nathan Halper business records Archives of American Art
referencedIn Irving Sandler interviews and papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Erle Loran papers Archives of American Art
creatorOf Doris Kreindler papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Betty Parsons Gallery records and personal papers Archives of American Art
creatorOf Hofmann, Hans, 1880-1966. Hans Hofmann : artist file : study photographs and reproductions of works of art with accompanying documentation 1930?-1990 [graphic] [compiled by staff of The Museum of Modern Art, New York]. Frick Art Reference Library of The Frick Collection
creatorOf Howard Wise Gallery records Archives of American Art
creatorOf Roh, Franz, 1890-1965. Franz Roh papers, ca. 1911-1965. Getty Research Institute
referencedIn Arnold Newman photographs of artists Archives of American Art
referencedIn Makler Gallery records Archives of American Art
referencedIn Kiesler, Lillian, 1910?-2001. Lillian and Frederick Kiesler papers, [circa 1910]-2003. Bulk 1958-2000. Smithsonian Institution. Libraries
referencedIn University of California, Berkeley, University Art Museum collection of Hans Hofmann papers, 1929-1976 Bancroft Library
creatorOf Worth Ryder papers Archives of American Art
creatorOf Hofmann, Hans, 1880-1966. Artist file. Brooklyn Museum Libraries & Archives
creatorOf Frederick Stallknecht Wight letters Archives of American Art
referencedIn Kootz Gallery records Archives of American Art
referencedIn Whitney Museum of American Art artists' files and records Archives of American Art
referencedIn Herbert Matter papers, ca. 1937-1984 Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Oral history interview with Katharine Kuh Archives of American Art
referencedIn Allan Kaprow papers, 1940-1997 Getty Research Institute
referencedIn Douglas, Laura Glenn, 1888-1962. Papers, 1899-1979. South Carolina Newspaper Project
referencedIn Elise Asher papers Archives of American Art
creatorOf William Horace Littlefield papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Henry Botkin papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Sanford Schwartz papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Dore Ashton papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Lillian and Frederick Kiesler papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Katharine Kuh papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Abraham Harriton Papers, 1915-1965 Syracuse University. Library. Special Collections Research Center
creatorOf Hofmann, Hans, 1880-1966. The painter and his problems : a manual dedicated to painting : typescript, 1963 Mar. 21 / by Hans Hofmann. Metropolitan Museum of Art, Thomas J. Watson Library
referencedIn Erle Loran papers Archives of American Art
creatorOf Hofmann, Hans, 1880-1966. Form und Farbe in der Gestaltung, 1915-1931. Getty Research Institute
referencedIn Guthrie Foster papers Archives of American Art
creatorOf Kuper, Rose. Rose Kuper collection of Hans Hofmann miscellany, 1932-1964. UC Berkeley Libraries
referencedIn Renate, Hans, and Maria Hofmann Trust. Research material compiled by Tina Dickey concerning Hans Hofmann, 1991-2000. Smithsonian Institution. Libraries
referencedIn Clement Greenberg papers Archives of American Art
creatorOf Elise Asher papers Archives of American Art
creatorOf Peggy (Georgina Margaret) Huck papers Archives of American Art
creatorOf Hans Hofmann papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Sidney Grossman papers Archives of American Art
creatorOf Paul Burlin papers Archives of American Art
creatorOf Angell, Nicholas B. Nicholas B. Angell collection of Evan Shipman papers and other materials, 1890-2009. Pennsylvania State University Libraries
referencedIn Vaclav Vytlacil papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Erle Loran papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Blanche Lazzell papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Grace Hartigan Papers, 1942-2006 Syracuse University. Library. Special Collections Research Center
referencedIn Tanager Gallery records Archives of American Art
referencedIn Worden Day papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn John and Monica Haley papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Hofmann, Hans : Biographical file. Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center
referencedIn Haley, John, 1905-1991. John Haley papers, 1929-1992. UC Berkeley Libraries
referencedIn Kiesler, Lillian, 1910?-2001. Lillian Kiesler papers, [ca. 1920]-2003. Smithsonian Institution. Libraries
creatorOf Toni LaSelle letters from Hans and Maria Hofmann Archives of American Art
referencedIn Robert Richenburg papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn American Federation of Arts records Archives of American Art
creatorOf Abraham Harriton papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Vytlacil, Vaclav, 1892-1984. Vaclav Vytlacil papers, 1928-1975. California Digital Library
referencedIn Matter, Herbert, 1907-1984. Herbert Matter papers, circa 1937-1984. Stanford University. Department of Special Collections and University Archives
referencedIn Charles Eames and Ray Eames Papers, 1885-1988, (bulk 1965-1988) Library of Congress. Manuscript Division
creatorOf Karl Knaths papers Archives of American Art
creatorOf Hans Hofmann letter to Amy Spingarn Archives of American Art
creatorOf Ida Kohlmeyer papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Reynal, Eugene, Mrs., 1905-1977. Hans Hofmann [graphic]. Archives of American Art
creatorOf Lee Nordness business records and papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Fritz Bultman papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Glenn Wessels papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Arthur B. Carles papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Fay Lansner papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Hofmann, Hans, 1880-1966 : [miscellaneous ephemeral material]. Metropolitan Museum of Art, Thomas J. Watson Library
referencedIn Ethel Schwabacher papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Douglas, Laura Glenn, 1888-1962. Laura Glenn Douglas papers, 1899-1979. University of South Carolina, System Library Service, University Libraries
creatorOf Harry Bowden papers Archives of American Art
creatorOf Hofmann, Hans, 1880-1966. Form und Farbe in der Gestaltung : ein Lehrbuch fur den Kunstunterricht, [19--] UC Berkeley Libraries
referencedIn Nicholas Wilder Gallery records Archives of American Art
creatorOf Hans Hofmann Collection Berkeley Art Museum/Pacific Film Archive
referencedIn Avis Berman research material on Katharine Kuh Archives of American Art
creatorOf John Little papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Katharine Kuh Archives of American Art
creatorOf Eleanor Arnold Clark papers Archives of American Art
creatorOf Lenita Manry papers Archives of American Art
creatorOf Leah Gold papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Katharine Kuh papers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Kiesler, Lillian 1910?-2001. Lillian and Frederick Kiesler papers, [circa 1910]-2003, bulk 1958-2000. Smithsonian Institution. Libraries
referencedIn Nell Blaine papers Houghton Library
Role Title Holding Repository
referencedIn Oral history interview with Fritz Bultman Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Oscar Chelimsky Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Ludwig Sander Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with John Grillo Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Myron S. Stout Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Robert M. Kulicke Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Milton Resnick Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Ida Kohlmeyer Archives of American Art
creatorOf Irma Jaffe interviews Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Lee Krasner Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral History interview with Miyoko Ito Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Larry Rivers Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Ray Eames Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Helen Marjorie Windust Halper Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Buffie Johnson Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with George McNeil Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Donald Barton Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Nell Blaine Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Nathan Halper Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Polly Thayer Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Lillian Orlowsky Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with George Earl Ortman Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Richard Stankiewicz Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Helen Frankenthaler Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Myron S. Stout Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with John Opper Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with George McNeil Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Nicholas Krushenick Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Mark Adams and Beth Van Hoesen Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Roland C. Petersen Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Jane Piper Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Jane Freilicher Archives of American Art
referencedIn Oral history interview with Seong Moy Archives of American Art
Relation Name
associatedWith Adams, Mark, 1925-2006. person
associatedWith American Art Expositions (Firm) corporateBody
associatedWith American Federation of Arts. corporateBody
associatedWith André Emmerich Gallery corporateBody
associatedWith Angell, Nicholas B. person
associatedWith Art Students League (New York, N.Y.) corporateBody
associatedWith Asher, Elise, 1914- person
associatedWith Ashton, Dore. person
associatedWith Ashton, Dore. person
associatedWith Barton, Donald, 1903-1990 person
associatedWith Berman, Avis. person
associatedWith Blaine, Nell, 1922- person
associatedWith Blaine, Nell, 1922-1996, person
associatedWith Botkin, Henry, 1896-1983. person
associatedWith Bowden, Harry, 1907-1965. person
associatedWith Bultman, Fritz, 1919-1985. person
associatedWith Burlin, Paul, 1886-1969. person
associatedWith Carles, Arthur B., 1882-1952. person
associatedWith Chelimsky, Oscar person
associatedWith Clark, Eleanor Arnold, 1911- person
associatedWith Day, Worden, 1916-1986. person
associatedWith Douglas, Laura Glenn, 1888-1962. person
associatedWith Eames, Charles. person
associatedWith Eames, Charles. person
associatedWith Eames, Ray person
associatedWith Eames, Ray. Charles Eames and Ray Eames papers. 1885-1988 person
associatedWith Elise Asher person
associatedWith Foster, Guthrie. person
associatedWith Frankenthaler, Helen, 1928-2011 person
associatedWith Freilicher, Jane, 1924- person
associatedWith Goldberg, Michael, 1924-2007. person
associatedWith Gold, Leah. person
associatedWith Greenberg, Clement, 1909-1994. person
associatedWith Grillo, John, 1917- person
associatedWith Grossman, Sid, 1915-1955. person
associatedWith Haley, John, 1905-1991. person
associatedWith Halper, Helen Marjorie Windust, 1908- person
associatedWith Halper, Nathan. person
associatedWith Hans Hofmann School of Fine Arts. corporateBody
associatedWith Harriton, Abraham, 1893-1986 person
associatedWith Harriton, Abraham, 1893-1987. person
associatedWith Hartigan, Grace. person
associatedWith Hofmann, Maria, 1885-1963. person
associatedWith Hofmann, Renate Schmitz, 1930-1992. person
associatedWith Howard Wise Gallery. corporateBody
associatedWith Huck, Peggy, d. 1996. person
associatedWith Ito, Miyoko, 1918-1983, person
associatedWith Jaffe, Irma B. person
associatedWith Johnson, Buffie person
associatedWith Kaprow, Allan person
associatedWith Kiesler, Lillian, 1910?-2001. person
associatedWith Knaths, Karl, 1891-1971. person
associatedWith Kohlmeyer, Ida, 1912-1997, person
associatedWith Kootz Gallery corporateBody
associatedWith Kootz Gallery (N.Y.) corporateBody
associatedWith Kootz Gallery (N.Y.) corporateBody
associatedWith Kootz Gallery (N.Y.) corporateBody
associatedWith Krasner, Lee, 1908-1984. person
associatedWith Kreindler, Doris Barsky, 1901-1974. person
associatedWith Krushenick, Nicholas, 1929- person
associatedWith Kuh, Katharine person
associatedWith Kulicke, Robert M. (Robert Moore), 1924-2007, person
associatedWith Kuper, Rose. person
associatedWith Lansner, Fay. person
associatedWith LaSelle, Toni, 1901-2002. person
associatedWith Lazzell, Blanche, 1878-1956. person
associatedWith Littlefield, William Horace, 1902-1969. person
associatedWith Little, John, 1907- person
associatedWith Loran, Erle, 1905-1999. person
associatedWith Makler Gallery. corporateBody
associatedWith Manry, Lenita. person
associatedWith Matter, Herbert, 1907-1984. person
associatedWith McNeil, George, 1908- person
associatedWith Moy, Seong person
associatedWith Museum of Modern Art (New York, N.Y.) corporateBody
associatedWith Newman, Arnold, 1918-2006. person
associatedWith Nicholas Wilder Gallery. corporateBody
associatedWith Opper, John, person
associatedWith Orlowsky, Lillian, 1914- person
associatedWith Ortman, George, 1926- person
associatedWith Parsons, Betty. person
associatedWith Petersen, Roland, 1926- person
associatedWith Piper, Jane, 1916- person
associatedWith Renate, Hans, and Maria Hofmann Trust. corporateBody
associatedWith Resnick, Milton, 1917- person
associatedWith Reynal, Eugene, Mrs., 1905-1977. person
associatedWith Richenburg, Robert person
associatedWith Rivers, Larry, 1925-2002, person
associatedWith Rodnick, Herman. person
associatedWith Roh, Franz, 1890-1965. person
associatedWith Ryder, Worth, 1884-1960. person
associatedWith Sander, Ludwig, 1906- person
associatedWith Schwabacher, Ethel, 1903-1984. person
associatedWith Schwartz, Sanford, 1946- person
associatedWith Spingarn, Amy, b. 1883. person
associatedWith Stankiewicz, Richard, 1922-1983 person
associatedWith Stout, Myron, 1908-1987. person
associatedWith Tanager Gallery corporateBody
associatedWith Thayer, Polly, 1904- person
associatedWith Thayer, Polly, 1904-2006 person
associatedWith University of California, Berkeley. University Art Museum. corporateBody
associatedWith University of California, Berkeley. University Art Museum. person
associatedWith Vytlacil, Vaclav, 1892-1984. person
associatedWith Wessels, Glenn, 1895-1982. person
associatedWith Whitney Museum of American Art. corporateBody
associatedWith Wight, Frederick Stallknecht, 1902- person
Place Name Admin Code Country
Massachusetts--Provincetown
New York (State)--New York
Subject
Abstract expressionism
Art, American
Art
Art, Abstract
Art schools
Art students
Art teachers
Color in art
Form (Aesthetics)
Painting
Painting, Modern
Occupation
Painter
Activity

Person

Birth 1880-03-21

Death 1966-02-17

Americans

German,

English

Information

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