The youngest member of the circle of first generation Abstract
Expressionist painters, Robert Motherwell was unique in this
group for his extensive writings on art as well as his prolific
printmaking. Born in Aberdeen, Washington, in 1915, Motherwell
grew up intending to become a philosopher and received a
bachelor's degree in philosophy at Stanford University before
heading east for graduate study at Harvard. As a child Motherwell’s
artistic talent was encouraged with a scholarship for study
at the Otis Art Institute in Los Angeles, but he did not
begin painting seriously until embarking on a year of European
travel in 1938.
In 1941, after traveling to Mexico with Chilean surrealist
Matta Echaurren, Motherwell decided to paint full time and
moved to Greenwich Village. During this decade, he was most
influenced by European surrealists, including Max Ernst,
Yves Tanguy and André Masson. Interested in the unconscious
mind, Motherwell explored theories of automatism by creating
free-association collages that he sometimes used as underpinnings
for future painting compositions. Automatism also offered
Motherwell “an active principle for painting, specifically
designed to explore unknown possibilities.”(1) Experimenting
with this technique, Motherwell developed a loose yet vigorous
brushwork that resonated with emotion.
Motherwell’s art displayed his passion for history,
literature, and the human condition. From the beginning he
strove to evoke a moral and political experience through
his art. As an example, the artist drew on the writing of
James Joyce for titles to his paintings, drawings, and prints
throughout his career. A poem by Spanish poet Frederico García
Lorca gave him the theme of the Elegy to the Spanish
Republic, which Motherwell explored in over 200 works.
Motherwell met William Baziotes in 1942 and quickly gained
entry to the group of New York artists who would become known
as Abstract Expressionists. In 1943, art collector and patron
Peggy Guggenheim invited Motherwell, along with Jackson Pollock
and Baziotes, to contribute work to an all-collage group
show. The following year, Motherwell had his first one-man
show at Guggenheim’s Art of This Century Gallery.
In the late 1960s, Motherwell began his Open series, a striking
departure from his gestural paintings. Typically fields of
color marked with faint charcoal lines suggesting a door
or a window, the Open paintings were originally inspired
by the sight of a small canvas leaning against a larger one.
For the rest of his career, Motherwell painted in both expressive
and austere modes, in addition to creating collages and collaborating
with printmakers to make limited edition prints.
Motherwell died suddenly at his home in Provincetown in
the summer of 1991 and worked productively up to the end.
By this time, his career had been widely celebrated and examined
with exhibitions not only at Museum of Modern Art in New
York, but also at the National Gallery of Art in Washington,
D. C., the Royal Academy in London, the Albright-Knox Art
Gallery in Buffalo and the Tamayo Museum in Mexico City (this
opened posthumously).
1) David Rosand, ed. Robert Motherwell on Paper.
(New York: Abrams, 1977), p.14.
© Copyright 2007 Hollis Taggart Galleries