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Abstract Expressionism

This title is no longer available from the Roland Collection. Details remain on this site for the reference of previous customers.

A personal account of the artists working in America during the 1940s and 1950s who are connected with so-called Abstract Expressionism. Expressionism itself is the deliberate desertion of naturalism in favor of a simplified style, involving exaggeration and distortion of line and color in order to produce a much greater emotional impact. Piet Mondrian was a Dutch painter who went to America in 1940; much earlier, he had changed his realist landscapes for Cubist ones, and he now became extremely influential with his `plastic art,' which restricted forms to purely geometrical shapes colored only in the three primary colors and white, black or gray. His work is examined along with that of his fellow abstract artists De Kooning, Rothko, Still, Pollock and Newman.

For more information see section 14












Availability:
This title is no longer available from the Roland Collection
Additional information
Order number: 554






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Credits Director
Charles Cooper

Presenter/Writer
Donald Judd

Open University/BBC
 
24 minutes
Color
Recommended audience age range 18-adult



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