Richard Pousette-Dart was a pioneering Abstract Expressionist
and a visionary of the New York School, which was active
in the 1940s and 50s. Despite significant contact with
all members of this group, Pousette-Dart chose to leave New
York City in 1951 to preserve his artistic freedom. He
remained fiercely independent throughout his career, creating
transcendental paintings of extraordinary depth and radiance. Powerful
dualities—circle and square, man and cosmos, spirit
and body, light and substance—are central to his work. He
explained in a 1947 artist statement, “I strive to
express the spiritual nature of the Universe. Painting for
me is a dynamic balance and wholeness of life; it is mysterious
and transcending, yet solid and real.”
Born on June 8, 1916, in Saint Paul, Minnesota, Pousette-Dart
grew up in a culturally rich environment in Valhalla, New
York, where his family moved in 1918. His father, Nathaniel
Pousette, was a painter and writer on art, and his mother,
Flora Louise Dart, was a musician and poet. From childhood,
they fostered their son’s interest in art, philosophy,
music, and literature.
Although Pousette-Dart had no formal art training, he spent
considerable time as a child watching his father at the easel
and discussing painting with him. After graduating
from Scarborough-on-Hudson High School, he briefly attended
Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, leaving before the end
of his first year to pursue a career as an artist. Encouraged
by his parents, he moved to Manhattan in 1937. To support
himself, he first served as assistant to the sculptor Paul
Manship, his father’s friend, and then worked as a
secretary in a photographic studio. In 1939, he quit
his job and devoted himself fully to painting and sculpture.
During the 1940s, Pousette-Dart was active in the avant-garde
New York art world; he became one of the youngest members
of the emerging group of Abstract Expressionists. His
early paintings reflect his interest in Cubism, biomorphic
Surrealism, Jungian and Freudian theories of the unconscious,
and African and Native American art. He had his first
solo show at the Artist’s Gallery in 1941 and subsequently
exhibited at Willard Gallery along with Mark Tobey in 1943,
at Peggy Guggenheim’s Art of This Century gallery in
1944, and at the Betty Parsons Gallery (regularly from 1948
to 1967), where Jackson Pollock, Barnett Newman, and Mark
Rothko also showed their work. Pousette-Dart participated
in discussions about abstraction at the legendary Studio
35, a meeting place for Abstract Expressionist artists, including
William Baziotes, David Hare, Robert Motherwell and Rothko,
and in the activities of the Eighth Street Club, founded
by Franz Kline, Willem de Kooning, and Ad Reinhardt among
others. He also socialized with Abstract Expressionist
painters at the Cedar Street Tavern on University Place and
at the 59th Street Automat.
In 1951, Pousette-Dart moved to Rockland County, New York,
where he lived with his wife, the poet Evelyn Gracey, until
his death in 1992. This self-imposed isolation from
the New York art world enabled him to distance himself from
the Abstract Expressionist movement and helped him to develop
the unique character of his imagery. However, he maintained
a connection with the next generation of artists by teaching
at a variety of schools in and around New York City, including
the New School for Social Research, the School of Visual
Arts, Columbia University, the Arts Students League, Bard
College and Sarah Lawrence College.
The substance of paint, often squeezed directly on board,
is a crucial aspect of Pousette-Dart’s work. Its
materiality adds dimension to the viewer’s experience
of light and color. Each touch carries distinct highlights
and shadows that shift according to the position of the viewer
or the source of light. As the viewer juggles the distinct
tasks of apprehending underlying shapes and appreciating
the physicality of each tiny unit of color, the experience
of seeing becomes as important as what is seen.
Pousette-Dart’s oeuvre displays cyclical variations
on themes and often resists neat categorization according
to a linear, chronological progression. Although there
are exceptions, early in the 1960s Pousette-Dart generally
backed away from including recognizable shapes and symbols
in his work, instead creating diffuse “implosions” of
pointillist color. In the late 1960s and early 1970s,
he became preoccupied with reintegrating geometric shapes.
His works can be found in the collection of many major museums
in the United States, including the Hirschhorn Museum and
Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.;
the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; The Metropolitan Museum
of Art; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; The Museum of Modern
Art, New York; the Philadelphia Museum of Art; the Solomon
R. Guggenheim Museum; and the Whitney Museum of American
Art.
References
Gordon, John, ed. Richard Pousette-Dart. New
York: Whitney Museum of American Art in cooperation with
Praeger, 1963.
Hobbs, Robert, and Joanne Kuebler. Richard Pousette-Dart. Indianapolis:
Indianapolis Museum of Art in cooperation with Indiana University
Press, 1990.
© Copyright 2007 Hollis Taggart Galleries