Lower Manhattan. 2003.

$300.00

A dramatic lower Manhattan cityscape rises strongly within two fields of color. The height of New York City skyscrapers buldge and grow within the confines of space on the canvas. A white edge surrounds the colors drawing the viewer's eyes to vertically climb and fall. The yellow and gray hues at top left along with the red hues at bottom right suggest the heat of a summer's day in the bustling American city.

Order Information

Item Number
AEGallery 2

Price
$300.00

Quantity:

All Prices in US Dollars
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Centered in New York City, 1946 to 1960's, Abstract Expressionism is a form of art in which the artist expresses himself purely through the use of form and color. It is form of non-representationan or non-objective art, which means that there are no concrete objects represented. Now considered to be the first American artistic movement of worldwide importance, the term was originally used to describe the work of Arshile Gorky, Willem de Kooning, and Jackson Pollock. Abstract Expressionism as a movement can be broadly divided into two groups: Action Painting, typified by artists such as Pollock, de Kooning, Franz Kline, and Philip Guston, put the focus on the physical action involved in painting; Color Field Painting, practiced by Mark Rothko and Kenneth Noland, among others, was primarily concerned with exploring the effect of pure color on a canvas.