The scene then as now was centered in New York. For the most part, I've kept a bit apart from that attractive and seductive city. I've done it by living in the country within commuting distance.
The scene then as now was centered in New York. For the most part, I've kept a bit apart from that attractive and seductive city. I've done it by living in the country within commuting distance.
I think of painting without subject matter as music without words.
With artists of my own generation there was at first no group identity - and never a clique.
As time goes on, I realize more and more that, beginning in the early 30's, David Smith began setting the precedent for what was to come later for many of us.
I paint my paintings directly. I almost never paint over. This maintains the attention of the picture for me, my contact with what I am doing.
I met David Smith through my former wife, Cornelia, who'd studied with him.
Because of this the representation I'm interested in is of those things only the eye can touch.
Pollock was well known, certainly, but for all the wrong reasons. He was known as much for being wild and unconventional in his working methods as for being a great artist.
For me context is the key - from that comes the understanding of everything.
I've also been willing to share any help that I could give to any other artist.
Usually I throw away what I don't get right the first time.
That's the way I work. Usually I start by fooling with the stuff, make messes. Sometimes something comes out of it sometimes it doesn't.
Context begins with other artists - seniors and mentors.
Clem had made it known that Pollock was a great painter.
In the '50s Morris Louis and I were not known, David Smith and Helen Frankenthaler were not much known.
© 2020 Inspirational Stories
© 2020 Inspirational Stories