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Spotlight in on the early years of Jackson Pollock

Pfirst exhibition in since 2008 on this representative of abstract expressionism and the triumph of American at the turn of the Second World War, the exhibition at the Picasso- museum presents “around a hundred works including around forty major paintings, the vast majority of which come from the United States” and in particular from MoMA in New York, according to Joanne Snrech, curator of the exhibition. Titled “Jackson Pollock, the early years (1934-1947)”she looks back at the beginnings of the artist’s career, marked by the influence of regionalism – an art close to territories far from big cities, of Picasso and Mexican muralists, up to his first “drippings” or projections of painting that revolutionized the way of painting.

Big brother

“Picasso meant a lot to Pollock and a whole generation of artists. They never met but Jackson Pollock’s older brother, Charles (also a painter, editor’s note), sends him magazines in which Picasso’s work is reproduced. He will be the first intermediary between modern art and its little brother to whom he will, in a way, give a foothold”according to the commissioner. It’s a 1939 exhibition called “Picasso: 40 years of his art” at MoMA, which then hosts « Guernica »who seems to have had “the strongest impact” on Pollock’s work, emphasizes Ms. Snrech. The first part of the exhibition shows drawings and paintings by Jackson Pollock, taking up the motif of the mask or the bull, whose mimicry with those of Picasso is disturbing. A series of drawings made by the American artist, suffering from bipolar disorder and an alcoholic, intended for his psychoanalyst as therapeutic support, constitute another astonishing testimony to the influence of the Spanish master. Born in 1912 in Wyoming, a rural state in the western United States, Jackson Pollock was one of five brothers from a modest family. “very politicized”, according to the commissioner. He arrived in New York in 1930 and discovered a bubbling artistic melting pot that would launch his career after academic training at the Art Student League where his teacher, Thomas Hart Benton, inspired him to use rhythmic painting.

Mexican muralists

Charles and Jackson will also travel together to the United States to observe the great cycles of frescoes by Mexican muralists: Diego Rivera, David Alfaro Siqueiros and José Clemente Orozco. All of them benefited in the early 1930s from numerous commissions from the United States where they stayed, sometimes holding workshops, like Siqueiros with whom Pollock would work in the spring of 1936. In January 1941, another MoMA exhibition devoted to Native American arts will also influence Jackson Pollock: more than a thousand works and objects are presented there, sand painting demonstrations are carried out by Navajo artists and a gigantic sculpted totem is erected outside. The painter will begin to work on the ground, also including totemic and shamanic motifs in his works. The exhibition also shows the influence on the artist of European figures exiled in the United States during the Second World War and in particular that of the Surrealists: automatism, key for them, of artistic creation, will be taken up by the painter in all his work. A room is dedicated to the artist’s meeting in 1942 with the collector and patron Peggy Guggenheim who opened a gallery in New York where she exhibited her rich collection of European avant-gardes alongside emerging artists including Jackson Pollock, “changing moment in his career”according to the commissioner. In 1944, MoMA bought his first work, « She-Wolf »presented in the exhibition. A final room is devoted to his evolution towards “drippings”, a multitude of paint projections, which are often reminiscent of calligraphy and which have made him famous worldwide.

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