- Jackson Pollock's death in 1956 depressed many who felt a deep loss, as Pollock represented their ambition for absolute liberation in art.
- However, over two years later, the author realizes their initial reaction was limited. Pollock accomplished something significant through both his attitude and innovations in painting.
- Key innovations included treating the whole painting surface as a continuum rather than separate parts, ignoring the confines of the canvas, and creating environments at a mural scale that immersed the spectator. These innovations suggest painting need not be a "tragic style" and new possibilities remain to be explored.
- Jackson Pollock's death in 1956 depressed many who felt a deep loss, as Pollock represented their ambition for absolute liberation in art.
- However, over two years later, the author realizes their initial reaction was limited. Pollock accomplished something significant through both his attitude and innovations in painting.
- Key innovations included treating the whole painting surface as a continuum rather than separate parts, ignoring the confines of the canvas, and creating environments at a mural scale that immersed the spectator. These innovations suggest painting need not be a "tragic style" and new possibilities remain to be explored.
- Jackson Pollock's death in 1956 depressed many who felt a deep loss, as Pollock represented their ambition for absolute liberation in art.
- However, over two years later, the author realizes their initial reaction was limited. Pollock accomplished something significant through both his attitude and innovations in painting.
- Key innovations included treating the whole painting surface as a continuum rather than separate parts, ignoring the confines of the canvas, and creating environments at a mural scale that immersed the spectator. These innovations suggest painting need not be a "tragic style" and new possibilities remain to be explored.
- Jackson Pollock's death in 1956 depressed many who felt a deep loss, as Pollock represented their ambition for absolute liberation in art.
- However, over two years later, the author realizes their initial reaction was limited. Pollock accomplished something significant through both his attitude and innovations in painting.
- Key innovations included treating the whole painting surface as a continuum rather than separate parts, ignoring the confines of the canvas, and creating environments at a mural scale that immersed the spectator. These innovations suggest painting need not be a "tragic style" and new possibilities remain to be explored.
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ALLAN
E.S'J/f'15 0/11 TNt:
I' of A"j t1Nl> LIFE (fi"EI(KL . C11 : Ul:'F c-ltLIFafl-NIA f'fi:ES..J'/ ;2003) /- t. The Legacy of Jackson Pollock (1958) The tragic news of Pollock's death two SUllllllers ago W;lS depressing to mJny of us. \Ve felt not only ,I sadness over the death ,1 great t1gure, hut also a deep loss, as if died too. We were a piece of him: he was, of our amhltion for absolute liheratlOn and a to overturn old tables of crockery and Rat the possibdity of an astounding a sort of ecstatic blIndness. But there was another, ,It the top" for heing his kmd of modern artist was to many, in the work before he died. It was this hizarre Jlnplication thJt was so moving. \Ve remembered van Cogh and Rimb;llld. But now It was our time, and a man some of us knew. This ultimate sacflfleial aspect of being an artist, whik not a new ldea, seemed in Pollock terribly modern, and in him the statement arid tin: ritual were so., so authoritative and all-encompassing in their scak and danng that, convictions, we could not fail to he affected hy tllIS sacrificial Side of Pollock that lay at the root of our deprc,siol1. Pollock's tr3gedy was more suhtle than his death: for he did not die at the top. We could not avoid seeing that during the last five ye3rs of his life his strength had weakened, and during the last three he had h:mJly worked at all. Though everyone knew, in the light of re3son, that the man was very ill (his death was perhaps a respite from almost certain future suffering) and that he did not die as Stravinsky's fertility maidens did, in the very moment of creation! annihilation-still we could not escape the itch that connected this death in some direct way with art. And the THE FIFTl connection, rather than being climactic, was, in a way, mglorious. If the end had to come, it came at the wrong time. Was it not perfectly clear that modern art 111 general was Either it had become dull and repetitious as the "advanced" style, or numbers of formerly committed contemporary painters were defecting to earlier forms. America was a "sanity in art" movement, ami the flags were out. Thus, we reasoned, Pollock was the center in a great failure: the New Art. His heroic stand had been ~ l ! ! d ( ' F:lt\1I'1 !h;)l1 rr.,I(d;ls;Il\J lil,' I' \"111 111.!/ il ;11 hr<;i pr()II'II'iCl., o , not only a loss power and possible disillusionment for Pol lock but also that the jig was up. And those of us still resistant to this truth would end the same way, hardly at the top. Such were our thoughts in August 1956. But over two years have passed. What we felt then was genuine enough, but our tribute, if it was that at all, was a limited one. It was surely a manifest! y human reaction on the part of those of us who were devoted to the most advanced artists around us and who felt the shock of being thrown out on our OW!l. But it did not scem that Pollock had indeed accomplishnl something, hoth by his attitude and even those values and acknowledged by sensitivc artists and critics. The act of painting, the ncw space, the personal mark that builds its own form and mean ing, the endless tangle, the scale, the new materials are by now cliches of college art departments. The innovations are arc becoming part of textbooks. But some of the implications inherent in these new values are !lot as futile as we all began to believe; this kind of painting need not be called the tragic style. Not all the roads this modern art lead to ideas of finality. r hazard the guess that Pollock may have vaguely sensed this but was unable, because illness or for other reasons, to do about it. He created some magnificent paintings. But he also painting. If we examine a few of the innovations mentioned above, it may be possible to see why this is so. For Instance, the act of pauning. In the last seventy-five years the random play of the hand upon the canvas or paper has become in creasingly important. Strokes, smears, lines, dots became less and less 2 THE LLGi\CY OF lACK POLLOCK Jackson Pollock HI hi, s(ue!.o, 1450, PholoJ!,l'llph by !lam Namulh, attached to represented objects and existed more and more on their own, self-sufficiently. But from Impressionism up to, say, Gorky, the idea of an "order" to these markings was explicit enough. Even Dada, which purported to be of such considerations as "composition," obeyed the Cubist esthetic. One colored shape balanced (or modified others, and these in turn were played off against (or the whole canvas, taking into account its size and shape for the most part quite consciously. [n short, part-to-whole or flO matter how strained, were a of a picture (most of the time were a lot more, With Pollock. however, the so-called dance of dripping, 3 stretchers.) The otl of the Il1tcly. as 111 favor of a continuum going in all directlOllS si the literal dimensions of any work. of the attack as Pollock came to the the best ones he compensatt'd ttl[ surface around the b:lck of hi, " In Elr morc preCIse caesura: here ended the world of the spcct:!tor and THF F' squeezlI1g, (laut1Ing, and whatever else went into a work' an almost absolute value upon a diaristic gesture, He was en in this by the Surrc;llist painters ;md poets, but next to his their work is consistently "artful," " and full of aspects of outer control and training, With the huge canvas placed upon the Roor, thus making it difficult for the artist to see the whole or any extended section of "parts," Pollock could truthfully say that he was ";n" his work. Here the direct application of an automatic to the act t!lakes Il dear lhal nut unI: l' tim !Jut lLL ulJ CLl!t but it is perhaps bordering on ritual itself, which as one of its materials, (The European Surrealists may but we can hardly say they really practiced it wholeheartedly. In fact, only the wflter, among them--and only in a few imtances--enjoyed any success in ttm way, In retrospect, most of the Surrealist painters appear to have derived from ,1 psychology book or from c;lch other: the empty vistas, the basic naturalism, the sexual fanLlsies, the bleak so characteristic of thIS period have sllch real talents as Picasso, and Mir6 belong to the stricter of Cubism; perhaps this IS why their work appears to us, more free, Surrealism alLr,lcted Pollock as an rather as ;] collectiol1 of artistic u>ed the words "almost absolute" when I spoke of the dians tic before going into another "ace" He knevv the difference between a good gesture and a bad one, at work, and it mJkes him a part of of paInters, Yet the distance between the works of the EurotJCans and the up at one moment a c1eIKlency in him and at another moment a lib feature. I choose to consider the second element the important one.) 4 THE LEGACY J;\CKS():'>J POLLOCK am convinced that to grasp a Pollock's impact propeny, we must be acrobats, constantly shuttling between an identification with the hands and body that Hun" the paint and stood "in" the canvas and them to entangle and is indeed far from the idea of a The artist, the spectator, and the outer world are much too involved here, (And if we object to the difficulty of we arc asking too little of the Then Furm. T" f()llow Il, it is ncc('ssary to get rid of th" l1S1!:l1 Hle;1 and end, or any as fragmentation. We do not enter a lock's in anyone (or hundred and we dip in and out when and where we can. This to remarks that his art the impression of going on true insi"ht that suggests how Pollock ignored the conf1nes of the We :1Ccept this innov,ltion as valid because the artist understood with perfect naturalness "how to do it," Employing an iterative prin. of a few highly charged elements comtantly undergoing variatiol1 as in much Asian music), Pollock gives us an all ovcr the s:1fne time a means to choice, But this form allows us In a dC;JClen1l1g of the reasof1mg \aCUities, ;j Western sense of the term, This str;mgt combi nation of extreme individuality and selflessness makes the work re potent but also indicates 3 probably larger frame of reference. And for this reason any allusions to Pollock's the maker of giant textures are completely incorrect. They miss the point, and misunderstanding is bound to follow. 5 TlH, FiFTiES But the proper exhibition space with the walls totallv covered and sense of his art Then Scale. Pollock's choice of enormous canvases served many purposes, chief of which for our discllssion 1S that his muralscale ceased to become paintings and became environments. Be Ollr size as spectators, in relation to the size of the lnfluences how much we are willing to up conSClOlIsness of our temfloral exi,lL:llLC wl,ik L,xl',nCl1Cillg ic Pol lock's choice of great sizes resulted in our being confronted, sucked in. Yet we must not confuse the effect of these with that of the hundreds of large iJaintings done in the Renalssance, which ::m idealized everyday world familiar to the observer, often the painting hy means of trompe l'oeil. Pollock and our everyday world of convention the one created by the artist. Reverslng the ahove procedure, the painting is continued out into the room. And this leads me to my final point: The space of these creations is !lot clearly palpable as such. We can entangled in the web to some extent and by moving in and out of the skein of lines and ings can experience a kind of spatial extension. But eveII so, this space is an allusion far more vague than even the few inches of a Cuhist work affords. It may he that our need to . process, the making of the whole arfan, prevents a concentration on the specifics of before and behind so important in a more traditiollal art. But what I believe is clearly discermble is that the entire comes OLll at us (we ;Ire participants rather than the room. It is possihle to sec in this connection how Pollock tennlnal result of a trend that moved from the the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries to the of the Cubist collages. In the present case the br out the canvas is no longer a reference up on the wall, these marks surround us as work, so strict is the correspondence achieved hetween his the resultant art. What we have, then, is art that tends to lose itself out of tends to fill our world with itself, art that in seems to break Lllfly sharply with the traditions of. least the G reeks. Pollock's near destruction of this tradition may well 6 THE LECi\CY OF j,,\CKSON POLLOCK where art was more involved in ritual. we have known It in our recent past. If so, H 1S step and in its superior way ofTers a solution of those who would have us put a bit of life into art. But what do we do now? There arc two alternatives. (Jne is to continue in this vew. Prob, ably many good Pollock's without up the making of p:lintings mean the single flat or oval as we know it. It has been seen how Pollock carne pretty close to doing so himself. In the process, he carne upon some newer values that are exceedingly difficult to discuss yet bear upon our pres ent alternative. To say that he discovered things like marks, gestures, softness, Ilowing, stopping, space, the world, sOllnd naive. Every artist worth his salt has "discov, But Pollock's discovery seems to have a and directness about it. He was, for me, :unaz childlike, c:Jpable of becoming involved in the stuff or his art as a group of concrete seen for the first time. There is, as I said earlier, a certain hlindness, a mute belie! in c\'erythmg he docs, even up to the end. I urge that this not be seen as a simple 1ssue. Few individuals can be lucky enough to ]lossess the intensity of this kind of knowlllg, and I hope that in the near future a careful study or tillS Zen quality of Pollock's personality will be undertaken. AI any rate, for now we may consider that, except for rare inst:Jnces, Western art tends to need many more indirections in achieving itself, more or less cqu:JI emphasis upon "things" and the relations between them. The crudeness of Jackson Pollock is not, uncouth; it is manifestly frank and uncultivated, ullsullied by trade secrets, finesse- lhrectness that the European artists he liked for and partially succeeded in hut that he never had to strive after because he had it bv nature. This by itself would be to as I sec him, left us at the point where we must with and even dazzled by the space and of our everyday life, either our bodies, clothes, rooms, or, if need be, the vastness of Forty-second Street. Not satisfied with the through paint of our other senses, we shall utilize the specific sub stances of silIht, sound, movements, people, odors, tOllch. Objects of 7 Pig. Allan Kaprow in The Apple Shrine, 1960. Plwloglaph by Rob,.,./ McElroy. THE Ll:.GACY OF J KSON POLLOCK every sort are materials for the new an: paim, chairs, food, electric and neon lights, smoke, water, old socks, a dog, movies, a thousand other that will be discovered by the present generation of artists. NO[ only will these bold creators show us, as if for the first time. the world had about us but ignored, but and events, found in cans, seen in store windows and on the streets; and sensed in dreams and horrible accidents. An odor of crushed strawberries, a C'[ from a friend, or ;] billh():ml selling IILlno; rhrC'c t;1ps on the front door, ;] scratch, a sigh, or a voice succato ;] bowler hat-all will bccome materi;]I, for this new concrete art. ;1r11StS of today need no longer say, .. I am a palI1ter or a or ";] dancer." They are simply "artists." All of life will be open to them. They will discover out of ordinary thin!!s the ordirlariness. They will not try to make them state their re;1! aIle! then critiCS wil! be confused or amllsed, but these, I am certain, will he the alchemies of the 19605. 9