Essayworld.com
What Topic Is Your Essay On?
 
Search 50,000 Professionally Written Essays!
 The Ultimate Online Student Resource  Over 10,000+ Free Essays Available! Sun Jul 20 2008 - 11:45:04 EDT 
homeessayssearchresourcesprewritten papersmessage boardlinkscontact us

NAVIGATE
 Print Essay
 Email Essay
 Search Essays
 Browse Essays
 Request Essay
 Submit An Essay
 Custom Writing
 Sell Your Papers

Sponsors



Email Essay Print Essay

FEATURED ESSAYS
1. William DeKooning
2. Abstract Expressionism
3. Willem De Kooning
4. Willem De Kooning
5. Chuck Close
6. Abstract Expressionism
7. Vincent Van Gogh
8. The Unholy Crusade
9. Timeline Of Art
10. Andy Worhal
11. Term African Slave Trade
12. Van Gogh
13. Big Bang


Willem De Kooning


     Willem De Kooning had been widely acknowledged as one of the greatest
painters of this century known for his daring originality. Several
exhibitions in the U.S. and abroad have celebrated the artistic
achievements of this eminent artist's 60-year career. My essay covers part
of his early life with real focus on his late paintings. His last works,
painted in the 1980s, as he was in deteriorating health have come under
criticism by some critics. Willem de Kooning was born on April 24, 1904 in
Rotterdam, the Netherlands. His father was a beer distributor and his
mother ran a bar. At the age of twelve he became an apprentice at a
commercial design and decorating firm. He studied for eight years at
Rotterdam's leading art school. In 1926, de Kooning secured a passage on a
streamer to the United States, illegally entering and settling in New
Jersey. He quickly moved to Manhattan, painted signs and worked as a
carpenter in New York City. Then in 1935, he landed a job with the Works
Progress Administration, a government agency that put artists to work
during the Great Depression. By the next decade, he had attained a place in
the downtown art scene among his fellow artists.
     By the late 1940s, de Kooning along with Arshile Gorky, Jackson
Pollock, Mark Rothko and Barnett Newman, began to be recognized as a major
painter in a movement called "Abstract Expressionism". This new school of
thought shifted the center of twentieth century art form Paris to New York.
Willem de Kooning was recognized as the only painter who had one foot in
Europe and one in America. He combined classical European training in
Holland with a love for popular American culture. The restlessness and
energy of American life was a source of great inspiration and passion for
him. Gary Garrells, the chief curator at the San Fransisco Museum of Modern
Art said, " He had the wildness of Pollock but mixed with the impeccable
craftsmanship of the European tradition. He was not interested in style, he
was interested in the process of looking and knowing and getting under the
skin." Willem de Kooning, 93, was the last survivor of his famous peers.
One would not have predicted for him a great old age. Among the leading
figures of hard-living generation he belonged by temperament and talent to
a romantic tradition of artists who burned the physical and psychic fuel of
themselves with devastating speed and completeness. Few of de Kooning's
closest friends and colleagues survived the harshness of the 1940s and
1950s. In 1948, Arshile Gorky, De Kooning's mentor for his studio on the
eastern end of Long Island, committed suicide at 48.
     In 1956, Jackson Pollock at the age of 44, killed himself in a drunken
roadside collision. In 1962, Franz Kline gave himself away to a heart
attack at 52. Three years later David Smith died in a car crash at 59 and
in 1970 Mark Rothko, slit his wrists while battling ever-deepening
alcoholic depression. Willem de Kooning was the principal member of the
Abstract Expressionism. Abstract Expressionism gave birth as a reaction to
years of struggle against conservative taste, improvised circumstances and
reinforced by confused feelings created after World War II. De Kooning was
celebrated for his ferocious Women painting in 1950s. In 1956, he took a
break form Women theme, and started to paint small, packed shapes with a
feel for city. Woman merged into an urban landscape filled with small,
interchangeable parts of the metropolitan environment. In 1963, he began a
new series of Women. He painted women on tall door panels. De Kooning's art
was of mutually exclusive contradictions without the resolution of
synthesis, of harmony and balance. By the end of 1970s, he had reached a
point of near total spiritual exhaustion- partly due to heavy drinking and
partly for a tendency to forgetfulness and a gradual detachment from the
world around him.
     Much was said of Kooning about his last drawings, " as a doodling of a
helpless old man," but the reality was quite different. De Kooning
succumbed to Alzheimer disease in late 1970s. According to Peter Schjedahl,
in his essay, De Kooning later life was compared to King Lear in
Shakespeare's play. It is said of him , " The wonder is, he hath endures so
long./ He but usurped his life." Peter continued on with these lyrics of
King Lear to praise De Kooning's later life. Come, let's away to prison. We
two alone will sing like birds i'the cage. When thou dost ask me blessing,
I'll kneel down And ask of thee forgiveness. So we'll live, And pray, and
sing, and tell old tales, and laugh At gilded butterflies, and hear poor
rogues Talk of court news; and we'll talk with them too, Who loses and who
wins; who's in, who's out; And take upon's the mystery of things, As if we
were God's spies; and we'll wear out, In a walled prison, packs and sects
of great ones That ebb and flow by the moon. "Willem De Kooning: The Late
Paintings, The 1980s" , an exhibit in Modern Museum of San Fransisco, was
the center of a critical controversy. He was labeled to be lost to
Alzheimer's disease and thought to be slipped from reality. According to a
critic in New York Daily, " the paintings are like seeing a comic actor
cast unexpectedly in a serious role." She further stated that there was a
evidence of loss of energy in those recent paintings. To be specific she
picked Untitled XIII (1986). She criticized by saying, " the quality of
line dissolves from improvisational to conventional. Rather than making
their own paths, lines become mere stripes, tracing the outlines of forms,
already laid down on the canvas." The critic accused the exhibit curator
Gary Garrells of taking an unusual step of collecting a panel of experts to
determine when De Kooning's work began to lose coherence. The panel
included painter Joseph Johns and curator Robert Storr of New York's Museum
of Modern Art. After close examination of his paintings the expert group
determined that De Kooning's work faltered after 1988. Gary Garrells
declared the paintings made before 1988 as the most beautiful and sensual
abstracts works of modern art. There was not mere criticism by critics, who
even hired some neurologists to back up their claim for faulty paintings.
     A lot was written to acknowledge and criticize the originator of the
Abstract Expressionist School. The exhibition at San Fransisco Museum of
Modern Art drew paintings from private and public collections. Most of the
observers and curators called it the most fluid, sensual and celebratory
works created in the twentieth century full with "luminous" strokes of
yellow, red, orange and blue. The paintings were called as a beautiful
interlude of the sun and sky, ocean and ballet. Another impressed critic
expressed his opinion about the exhibition by declaring that De Kooning has
refused to categorize his paintings throughout his career. He clearly
shifted between figurative and abstract paintings and sometimes fused the
two. He would reinvent his manner of working style, which eluded his
critics. This renewed his vigor, which he sustained over decades by
continual invention and new vision. At the age of 75, De Kooning again
shifted by another way of working. His initial acclaimed works with heavy
layering of surfaces, dense and excitable strokes and rich diverse colors
gave way to open and spare forms. These recent paintings had scraped and
carefully constructed surfaces. The primary colors were concentrated with
complements of green, orange and violet with subtly toned creamy
backgrounds. These paintings reminded of his 1930s and1940s work with an
assurance e and freedom only attained by a master painter.
     Robert Storr, curator from New York's Museum of Modern Art was one of
the coordinator of his last exhibition. He wrote in Winter/Spring 1997
issue of MOMA Magazine that the story of De Kooning in the 1980s is that of
a nearly miraculous recovery of focus and ambition. After several years, De
Kooning was newly sober and had astounding determination to resolve
outstanding issues of his works. Knowing that failure would have confirmed
the opinion of those who were expecting his decline, he said, "Failure
ought to take your whole life, active life." His final creative burst had a
sheer number of canvases resembling Women 1,his earlier acclaimed effort.
Storr narrates in his essay, that films of the artist at work show that he
would labor over certain passages, rephrase a curve, cancel out large,
complex areas thus creating a clearly legible distribution of bounded
shapes, flowing lines and open spaces. He was confident of his freedom to
paint with all creative restraint. These films produced an uncanny
experience reading the tracks of brush across the canvas. These moves would
envy anyone then painting. Moving away from Abstract Expressionism, he
dwelled on various techniques of neo-expressionism. By virtue of its
freshness, De Kooning's works will be placed in the foreground of any
accurate picture of this period.
     I think De Kooning life's art achievement speak for themselves by its
demand and recognition in the art world. As the controversy surrounding his
late works Kooning was an imaginative which was not easy to be understood
by his few contemporaries. He could be likened to Beethoven who created his
masterpiece Ninth Symphony when he could hear single word of formed music.
A genius in his own department De Kooning, in spite of his progressive
disease, created something original and fresh away form his earlier works.


ADDITIONAL FEATURED ESSAYS
Corporate Strategy
With reference to the Honda case study and also drawing on other examples from the Critical Issues course, what are the
Carnegie Forum On Education Report, And The Holmes Group Report
were two reports drawn up by a group of people who had their own ideas on how public education in the United States coul
Report On The Costs And Benefi
REPORT ON THE COSTS & BENEFITS OF A BUILDING SOCIETY CONVERTING TO A PLC At the beginning of this century there were mor
Martial Arts
To follow is my report on in Asia. This a very interesting subject, and a very good report. It will describe and some ty
Health Care Reforms
The key opportunities will be changing processes to reduce the delivered cost of material through cost accounting, imbed



Cool Essay Sites
 Termpapersites.com
 AntiStudy
 Anti Essays
 Big Nerds
 Chuckiii
 College Term Papers
 Essay Crawler
 Get Free Essays
 Oppapers
 Planet Papers

Awesome Stuff
 Free SMS
 Free Ringtones

home | about | partners | privacy | advertise | contact us

EssayEdge Admissions Essay Editing Service
Make Your Essay Excellent
Enter Your Essay Subject Below:

Search over 30,000 papers at Monster Essays

Copyright © 1998-2005 Essayworld.com  All rights reserved