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Color as Field: American Painting, 1950–1975

By Karen Wilkin with an essay by Carl Belz
Published in 2007 by the AFA in association with Yale University Press
127 pages, 69 illus. (53 in color), 11 3/4 x 8 3/4 in.
Paper • ISBN 978-1-885444-36-3 • $29.95 (AFA/ members only)
Cloth • ISBN 978-0-300-12023-3 • $45.00 (Yale University Press)

Color Field painting, which emerged in the United States in the 1950s, is based on radiant, uninflected hues. Exemplified by the work of Helen Frankenthaler, Morris Louis, Kenneth Noland, Jules Olitski, Larry Poons, and Frank Stella, among others, these stunningly beautiful and impressively scaled paintings constitute one of the crowning achievements of postwar American abstract art. Color as Field offers a long-overdue reevaluation of this important aspect of American abstract painting. The authors examine how Color Field painting rejects the gestural, layered, and hyperemotional approach typical of Willem de Kooning and his followers, yet at the same time develops and expands ideas about all-overness and the primacy of color posited by the work of other members of the Abstract Expressionist generation, such as Adolph Gottlieb, Hans Hofmann, Robert Motherwell, Jackson Pollock, and Mark Rothko. From the fresh historical standpoint of the twenty-first century, this fascinating reassessment ranges across the artists' individual approaches and their commonalities and poses the reconsideration of the legacy of Color Field painting.

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