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Adolph & Esther Gottlieb Foundation

  • Home
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Spotlight: Gottlieb's Imaginary Landscape Paintings From 1969

March 31, 2020 Gottlieb Foundation
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Among the different types of paintings that Adolph Gottlieb was known for were those he called "Imaginary Landscapes". He created the first of these, titled The Frozen Sounds in 1951 and it marked a sharp break with the Pictograph compositions for which he had become known. The grids of the Pictographs, an early form of the all-over composition noted as central to Abstract Expressionist painting, gave way to Gottlieb's incessant drive to look for more. When his colleagues were pursuing the all-over approach, Gottlieb determined to explore the new theories of abstraction using two counterposed horizontal registers--one composed in his all-over method, the other reductive and focused. In 1969, the year after his solo exhibition that filled the Guggenheim and the Whitney Museums, Gottlieb completed a collection of Imaginary Landscape paintings. We wanted to take a closer look at some of the paintings created during that year.

View of Gottlieb's bedroom in East Hampton with Deep Red Ground and Chrome Yellow Ground (both 1969), c. 1972. Photographer Bud Waintrob

White, Maroon, Blue, 1969, oil on canvas, 48 x 60 in.

Two Grey Discs, 1969, oil on canvas, 48 x 60 in.

Green, Ochre, Maroon, 1969, oil on linen, 48 x 60 in.

Two White Discs, 1969, oil on canvas, 48 x 60 in.

In this interview with Dorothy Seckler from 1967, Gottlieb speaks about the development of Imaginary Landscapes within the larger body of his work 

"I was interested in finding something else to say, to express. So it was necessary to find other forms, a different, changed concept. So I finally, after a certain period of transition, I hit on dividing the canvas into two parts, which then became like an imaginary landscape. However, while this seemed like a great break, it wasn't such a great break because in a philosophical sense what I was doing was the same. In other words, I've always done the same thing. That is, I'm interested in certain opposing images."

Pre-installation photo for “10 Americans After Paul Klee” at the Zentrum Paul Klee, Bern, September 2017.

 

Three Discs on Chrome Ground, 1969, oil and acrylic on canvas, 48 x 72 in.

 
← A Look Back: "Adolph Gottlieb" At Paul Kantor GalleryAn Inside Look: Wall 1969, Part 2 →
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