Black Abstract Wallpaper Biography
Source (Google.com.pk)
Source (Google.com.pk)
In the late 1930s and early 1940s Kline worked figuratively, painting landscapes and cityscapes in addition to commissioned portraits and murals. Kline's best known abstract expressionist paintings, however, are in black and white.
Kline re-introduced color into his paintings around 1955, though he used color more consistently after 1959. Kline's paintings are deceptively subtle. While generally his paintings have a dynamic, spontaneous, and dramatic impact, Kline often closely referred to his compositional drawings. Kline carefully rendered many of his most complex pictures from studies. There seem to be references to Japanese calligraphy in Kline's black and white paintings, although he always denied that connection.Bridges, tunnels, buildings, engines, railroads, and other architectural and industrial icons are often suggested as imagery informing Kline's work.
Kline's most recognizable method/style derives from a suggestion made to him by his friend Willem De Kooning. In 1948, de Kooning suggested to an artistically frustrated Kline to bring in a sketch and project it with a Bell Opticon opaque projector he had at his studio. Kline described the projection as such:
"A four by five inch black drawing of a rocking chair...loomed in gigantic black strokes which eradicated any image, the strokes expanding as entities in themselves, unrelated to any entity but that of their own existence."
Drawing was an essential element in Kline's process, and he would return over and again to forms first sketched on the pages of telephone books, structures that provided the basis of his essays in black and white.He created paintings in the style of what he saw that day throughout his life. In 1950 he exhibited many works in this style at the Charles Egan Gallery. In the later 1950s such paintings as Requiem (1958) added a third type of work to his repertory, by allowing the previously clearcut monochrome divisions to merge into a more complex chiaroscuro. From 1958 he introduced strong colors into some of his works;from 1959 to 1961, Kline executed a sequence of exceptionally large works, known as the "wall paintings". olor Field painting is a style of abstract painting that emerged in New York City during the 1940s and 1950s. It was inspired by European modernism and closely related to Abstract Expressionism, while many of its notable early proponents were among the pioneering Abstract Expressionists. Color Field is characterized primarily by large fields of flat, solid color spread across or stained into the canvas creating areas of unbroken surface and a flat picture plane. The movement places less emphasis on gesture, brushstrokes and action in favour of an overall consistency of form and process. In color field painting "color is freed from objective context and becomes the subject in itself."
During the late 1950s and 1960s, Color field painters emerged in Great Britain, Canada, Washington, DC and the West Coast of the United States using formats of stripes, targets, simple geometric patterns and references to landscape imagery and to nature.
Black Abstract Wallpaper Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Black Abstract Wallpaper Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Black Abstract Wallpaper Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Black Abstract Wallpaper Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Black Abstract Wallpaper Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Black Abstract Wallpaper Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Black Abstract Wallpaper Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Black Abstract Wallpaper Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Black Abstract Wallpaper Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Black Abstract Wallpaper Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Black Abstract Wallpaper Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures
Black Abstract Wallpaper Free Black Wallpapers Photos Images Pictures