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Surface Work: the women who made abstract art

Julia Weiner introduces a new exhibition

April 12, 2018 15:26
Louise Fishman
Bearer of the Rose, 2017
Oil on linen
177.8 x 228.6 cm
70 x 90 in
© Louise Fishman 
Courtesy Cheim & Read, New York
4 min read

"Abstract is not a style. I simply want to make a surface work.” So said the artist Joan Mitchell in 1986, and from her words a new exhibiton takes its title. Surface Work at Victoria Miro’s two London galleries celebrates the contribution that women have made to abstract painting, bringing together works by more than 50 artists of different generations from all over the world.

Jewish artists are well represented in the exhibition. Among them are Lee Krasner and Helen Frankenthaler, who were both part of the Abstract Expressionist movement that began in New York and became very influential all over the world.

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Jews were without doubt disproportionately represented in this movement, not only as artists but also as the intellectuals and critics who wrote about the work. The best known artists include Mark Rothko, born Markus Rothkonwitz in Dvinsk, Russia in 1903 and Barnett Newman, born in New York City in 1905 to recent immigrants from Poland. Their work was written about by two rival Jewish art critics and intellectuals, Clement Greenberg and Harold Rosenberg.