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Pressing Ideas: Fifty Years of Women’s Lithographs from Tamarind, Artist Spotlight: Elaine de Kooning

Blog Category:  NMWA Exhibitions
View of an exhibition space with white and lilac walls. There are several prints and lithographs hanging on the walls.
Elaine (Fried) de Kooning (1918–89), primarily known for her Abstract Expressionist portrait paintings, was also an influential art teacher at institutions including Yale University, Carnegie-Mellon University, Parsons School of Design, and the University of Georgia. As a frequent contributor to ARTnews, her articles about fellow artists like Franz Kline, Arshile Gorky, and David Smith made Abstract Expressionism accessible to many readers. Art critic and essayist Rose Slivka  said, “She was not only the movement’s interpreter, but its spirit.”

Elaine de Kooning photograph by Timothy Greenfield Sanders
Timothy Greenfield Sanders, Elaine de Kooning (1980), courtesy of the photographer. © Timothy Greenfield-Sanders. www.greenfield-sanders.com

De Kooning was also honored as an artist by ARTnews: she was featured with nineteen other women artists on the October 1980 cover of the issue “Where Are the Great Men Artists?” (a play on feminist art historian Linda Nochlin’s famous January 1971 ARTnews article, “Why Have There Been No Great Women Artists?”).

A magazine cover with women sitting next to each other and the title “Where Are the Great Men Artists?”
October 1980 ARTNews cover: “Where Are the Great Men Artists?” Elaine de Kooning is in the top row on the right, wearing black.

De Kooning’s work was not given substantial attention during her lifetime. She was in the professional shadow of her famous artist husband, Willem de Kooning, and her primary subject matter, figurative imagery and particularly portraiture, ran counter to the accepted tenets of Abstract Expressionism (although Willem de Kooning experimented with figurative imagery to greater critical acclaim). She was not publicly resentful, however, stating, “I was working in his light. And a great many others were working in the same light. I’ve always been willful and autocratic anyway, and found him an illuminator, hardly a caster of shadows.”

An expressionist painting of a man in a suit sitting in front of a green background.
John F. Kennedy, 1963; Oil on canvas, 102 1/2 x 44 x 1 1/2 in.; Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, © Elaine de Kooning Trust.

One of her most famous portrait series depicts John F. Kennedy. She originally intended to paint one work for the Harry S. Truman Library in Independence, Missouri, but Kennedy fascinated her as a portrait subject, and she painted twenty-three versions of his image. De Kooning was the only artist to sketch the president in person, though he had no time to sit still: she made preliminary drawings for the series as Kennedy conducted meetings with his advisors.

An illustration of a taurus.
Taurus VIII, 1973; Lithograph, 38.1 x 53.3 cm; The Tamarind Archive Collection, University of New Mexico Art Museum, Albuquerque.

NMWA’s Pressing Ideas: Fifty Years of Women’s Lithographs from Tamarind features three de Kooning lithographs: Taurus IV, Taurus VIII, and Taurus X, all 1973. She took full advantage of the medium of lithography in these compositions, using a wide crayon and washes to achieve fluid, energetic prints. The body of the bull in Taurus VIII is made up of stain-like areas with a sinuous outline, while Taurus X features a darker, more boldly defined bull. The background of the latter print also demonstrates the particularities of de Kooning’s technique through splatters of wash and stutters of crayon. The subtly varying shades of grey and black allow the central bull in each print to both stand out from and interact with the backgrounds.

An illustration of a taurus.
Taurus X, 1973; Lithograph, 38.1 x 53.3 cm.; The Tamarind Archive Collection, University of New Mexico Art Museum, Albuquerque.

De Kooning was fascinated by bulls after seeing bullfights in Juarez, Mexico, in the 1950s. She continued to work with this subject throughout her career, culminating in a series of works in 1987 inspired by cave paintings of bulls, bison, and horses in Lascaux, France.

An illustration of a taurus.
Taurus IV, 1973; Lithograph, 66.0 x 94.0 cm., The Tamarind Archive Collection, University of New Mexico Art Museum,Albuquerque.

De Kooning’s painting Bacchus #3, 1978, one of five de Kooning works in NMWA’s collection, is currently on view on the third floor. The Taurus prints in Pressing Ideas: Fifty Years of Women’s Lithographs From Tamarind will be on view through October 2.

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