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Barnett Newman, Jackson Pollock and Tony Smith

Barnett Newman, Jackson Pollock and Tony Smith
Usage Conditions Apply
Artist
Hans Namuth, 17 Mar 1915 - 13 Oct 1990
Sitter
Barnett Newman, 29 Jan 1905 - 04 Jul 1970
Jackson Pollock, 28 Jan 1912 - 11 Aug 1956
Tony Smith, 1912 - 26 Dec 1980
Date
1951
Type
Photograph
Medium
Gelatin silver print
Dimensions
Image: 54.7cm x 45.7cm (21 9/16" x 18")
Sheet: 60.7cm x 50.6cm (23 7/8" x 19 15/16")
Topic
Artwork\Painting
Equipment\Smoking Implements\Cigarette
Home Furnishings\Furniture\Seating\Bench
Interior\Museum
Barnett Newman: Male
Barnett Newman: Visual Arts\Artist\Sculptor
Barnett Newman: Visual Arts\Artist\Painter
Tony Smith: Visual Arts\Artist
Tony Smith: Male
Tony Smith: Visual Arts\Artist\Sculptor
Tony Smith: Visual Arts\Architect
Tony Smith: Visual Arts\Art instructor
Jackson Pollock: Male
Jackson Pollock: Visual Arts\Artist\Painter
Jackson Pollock: Visual Arts\Artist\Abstract Expressionist
Portrait
Place
United States\New York\Kings\New York
Credit Line
National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution; gift of the Estate of Hans Namuth
Restrictions & Rights
Usage conditions apply
Copyright
© Hans Namuth Ltd.
Object number
NPG.95.151
Exhibition Label
This photograph represents three pioneers in the field of abstract art, who were also close friends and collaborators. The painters Barnett Newman (1905–1970; left) and Jackson Pollock (1912–1956; center) and the architect (later sculptor) Tony Smith (1912–1980; right) met in the late 1940s and bonded through their efforts to expand the parameters of contemporary art. Pollock debuted his classic drippour paintings in 1947; Newman created his signature “zip” (a band of vertical color) in 1948; and Smith drew on his architectural experience to install their work at the gallery of Betty Parsons—one of the few dealers willing to represent such unconventional artists at the time.
Hans Namuth photographed the three friends in 1951, sitting on a bench outside Newman’s second solo exhibition at Parsons’s Midtown gallery. The complexity of their relationship is suggested by Newman’s remark that everything he did “had meaning only in relation to Pollock’s work and against it.”
En esta foto aparecen tres pioneros del arte abstracto que fueron amigos y colaboradores. Los pintores Barnett Newman (1905–1970, izq.) y Jackson Pollock (1912–1956, centro) y el arquitecto (luego escultor) Tony Smith (1912–1980, der.) se conocieron a fines de la década de 1940 y forjaron vínculos en su propósito de expandir los parámetros del arte contemporáneo. Pollock introdujo su clásico estilo de chorrear pintura sobre el lienzo en 1947; Newman creó su emblemático “zip” (una banda de color vertical) en 1948; y Smith utilizó su experiencia como arquitecto para instalar las obras del grupo en la galería de Betty Parsons, una de los pocos agentes dispuestos a representar a artistas tan poco convencionales en aquella época.
Hans Namuth los fotografió en 1951, sentados a la entrada de la segunda exposición de Newman en la galería de Parsons, en el centro de Manhattan. La complejidad de su relación se insinúa en el comentario de Newman de que todo lo que hacía “tenía sentido solo en relación con la obra de Pollock, y en oposición a ella”.
Data Source
National Portrait Gallery
Location
Currently not on view