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    Abstract painter Helen Frankenthaler dies at 83

    NEW YORK (AP) — Helen Frankenthaler, an abstract painter known for her bold, lyrical use of color who led a postwar art movement that would later be termed Color Field painting, died Tuesday at her home in Connecticut, her nephew said. She was 83.

    One of Frankenthaler's most famous works is "Mountains and Sea," a 1952 painting at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., which she created by pouring thinned paint directly onto raw, unprimed canvas laid on the studio floor.

    Frankenthaler's death at her home in Darien, Connecticut, followed a long illness, said her nephew, Clifford Ross, a multimedia artist and photographer known for his large landscapes.

    Her abstract style helped American art make the transition from Abstract Expressionism to Color Field painting and influenced such artists as Morris Louis and Kenneth Noland.

    "Very few artists are able to develop a vocabulary and create an aesthetic that affects other artists deeply," said Ross. "She was the one who transmitted a certain kind of freedom and boldness use of the subconscious and impulse from the Abstract Expressionists on through the Color Field painters."

    She was awarded the National Medal of Arts in 2002. From 1985 to 1992, she served on the National Council on the Arts of the National Endowment for the Arts.

    Frankenthaler was born on Dec. 12, 1928, on New York's Upper East Side and got her bachelor's degree from Bennington College in Vermont, where she studied with Paul Feely. She studied at Columbia University in New York and took painting classes with Vaclav Vytlacil at the Art Students League and also with Hans Hofmann.

    She was only 23 when she created "Mountains and Sea," building on Jackson Pollock's abstract technique by pouring highly thinned oil paint from coffee cans directly onto the raw canvas to create floating fields of translucent color. Louis later said "Mountains and Sea" was "the bridge between Pollock and what was possible."

    Her first solo exhibition was presented in 1951 at New York's Tibor de Nagy Gallery, and she was also included that year in the landmark exhibition "9th Street: Exhibition of Painting and Sculpture." Frankenthaler also showed internationally, exhibiting at the International Biennial of Art in Venice in 1966 and in the United States Pavilion at Expo in Montreal in 1967.

    Frankenthaler went on to develop a highly personal painterly manner within the abstract expressionist movement. She worked in a wide range of media in addition to paintings on canvas and paper, including ceramics, sculpture, woodcuts, tapestry and printmaking.

    Frankenthaler explored a variety of linear components in her oil paintings of the 1950s, but in the 1960s she shifted her focus, embracing acrylic paints to explore open, flat fields of color, evident in the large and glowing 1973 painting "Nature Abhors a Vacuum." Ross said she was never doctrinaire and cheered art from Henri Matisse to David Smith to Willem de Kooning.

    In later years, Ross said, she seemed to have fallen out of favor "because of her embrace of beauty." He predicted that in the years to come, Frankenthaler's contribution will be "as a beacon about lyricism and openness and, frankly, beauty."

    "Helen's role, critically, was to provide beauty and a certain sustenance at a very bleak time," Ross said. "One of the things I'm very curious about is to see how quickly that will be absorbed and celebrated."

    Frankenthaler, whose 13-year marriage to the painter Robert Motherwell ended in 1971, also is survived by her second husband, Stephen M. DuBrul Jr.

     

    91 comments

    • bucfanlostiniowa  •  4 mths ago
      I guess it was too hard to include any images of her paintings in the article.
    • Michael  •  Berea, Ohio  •  4 mths ago
      An obituary for an acclaimed artist and not one image of any of her work.
      • Robin B 4 mths ago
        Estate copyrights in action.
    • Hema Mikkilineni  •  4 mths ago
      Artists pass away. Art lives. Goodbye Ms. Frankenthaler. And thank you for your work.
      • hema 4 mths ago
        I have seen in google images. Even if her work doesn't hang in louvre, it is still art. It does not hurt me to appreciate someone's honest and creative effort. Her work is her way of expression, which is not to my taste. Still I appreciate her work.
      • forget Popeye's 4 mths ago
        I have some art for you........diarrhea splatter on canvas, and probably more sightly than the rubbish she vomited forth.
      • barbara 4 mths ago
        Art is in the eye of the beholder..
    • Jim  •  4 mths ago
      Most these clowns ridiculing Frankenthauler probably never even heard of her before this morning.
      • Jean 4 mths ago
        I agree Jim
      • old bat 4 mths ago
        Yep..and most of these clowns probably own one or two of those lovely paintings on velvet thinking that its "art"!
      • Circumcision 4 mths ago
        We have admired her work since the 1960's and we know how to spell 'Frankenthaler' correctly.
    • Eric  •  4 mths ago
      Loved Frankenthaler's work, and it continues to inspire my own work to this day. RIP Helen.
      • forget Popeye's 4 mths ago
        If those pieces of crap inspire you, then I'd hate to see the paint blobs that you have conjured up.
      • Jeff 4 mths ago
        all you need is a coffee can and paint.
      • Eric 4 mths ago
        Jeff, no, that would be Jasper Johns.
    • Russ  •  4 mths ago
      This story is about the passing of an artist, and you'd think this forum would be free from the idiot fringe! It's like dreaming that you awoke at a Walmart!
      • A Yahoo! User 4 mths ago
        So what to you do Russ, you take the bait and feed the trolls.
      • Russ 4 mths ago
        Got it!
      • Jean 4 mths ago
        well said Russ. Just ignore the ignorant
    • Bill  •  New York, New York  •  4 mths ago
      Abstract painting is an educated form of painting. It has to do with the history of art. These abstract painters had similar backgrounds in representational art, meaning, they could all draw and paint photo-realistically if they'd wanted to. But they challenged preconcieved ideas of what art was "supposed" to be by bucking the system and going abstract. Of course, any four year old can smear paint on a blank surface. But there is no "there" there. No intellectual decisions. And this is not to mention the period in American history that birthed abstractionist painting; post-war, vast economic changes, technological advances; all of this "informed" what painters and thinkers did then. It was a different world. To put up an abstract painting in a gallery at that time was extremely NEW and different. It was thinker's game. And if you ever just spent time with a Frankenthaler, Pollock, Rothko...you may begin to "see" what was going on; a twofold experience, one of history, and another of pure aesthetics.
    • Not sure If I have one.  •  Fresno, California  •  4 mths ago
      What exactly makes an Abstract painter a great Abstract painter?
    • Highly Compensated  •  4 mths ago
      Value of Frankenthaler's work has now doubled.
    • a l  •  St Louis, Missouri  •  4 mths ago
      love her works of art, esp in the dreariness of winter. She will live on in her art as one of America's best...rip
    • Rudeguy  •  Cincinnati, Ohio  •  4 mths ago
      Another one bites the dust, Ms. Frankenthaler was a very good abstract painter. Her images will be missed. Rest in Peace, Ms. Frankenthaler. Thank you for your gifts.
    • Carl  •  Los Angeles, California  •  4 mths ago
      she lived a full life and helped many people along the way, she was a great artist she''ll be missed. long live the people who aren''t boxed in a corner.
    • WAYNE  •  Cleveland, Ohio  •  4 mths ago
      I own some of her art work!! now it will increase in value! art work always goes up in value after the artist dies!!!!!!
    • fox patrol  •  Enumclaw, Washington  •  4 mths ago
      ...I would guess she divoriced Motherwell, because he was just a 'warmed over' KLINE...!
    • fox patrol  •  Enumclaw, Washington  •  4 mths ago
      ...and so where does ROTHKO fit in, to all of this...?!!
    • Michael  •  4 mths ago
      I like abstract art when it's pretty, but her famous works are hideous. I do a lot of abstract paintings myself and "pro" artists seem to hate it, but maybe that's because I don't give any #$%$ meaning to my art, I just do art that just looks interesting. Search youtube for "Sponge fluorescent abstract"; I need more comments from normal people.
    • Brent  •  Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  •  4 mths ago
      Beautiful painter. A giant has left the room.
    • Ro  •  San Francisco, California  •  4 mths ago
      Michael.. you are so right, exactly what I was thinking. Good ole Yahoo!
    • Natalie  •  4 mths ago
      I have enjoyed & appreciated her work many times. Thanks Helen for your contributions !
      Enjoy the big sky.....
    • A Yahoo! User  •  4 mths ago
      Well she lived longer than average. Life ends like this.
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