A key figure in American art, Lee Krasner's energetic works reflect the spirit of possibility in post-war New York. We look back through Lee Krasner's life, works and legacy as we cast aside the shadow of her husband, Jackson Pollock.
Lee Krasner: In Her Own Words (2019/2019) by Barbican Centre and Lee KrasnerBarbican Centre
One of the most tenacious artists of the twentieth century, Krasner demonstrates the fundamental role that the avant-garde women in post-war America played in shaping our current landscape.
Lee Krasner, c. 1938 – 40 (1938/1938) by Lee KrasnerBarbican Centre
Who was Lee Krasner?
Lee Krasner was born in Brooklyn, New York in 1908 almost nine months to the day after her parents were reunited. Joseph, Krasner’s father, had emigrated to the United States from a small village in Russia three years earlier to escape brutal anti-Jewish violence and to seek a new home for his family. The first of the Krasner children to be born in America, Lee joined three sisters and a brother, and a younger sister, Ruth, was arrived in 1910. Krasner’s family were Jewish Orthodox and spoke a mixture of Russian, Yiddish and English. However, Krasner began to rail against the treatment of women in Jewish scripture, renouncing religion completely by the time she was a teenager.
‘I was a woman, Jewish, a widow, a damn good painter, thank you, and a little too independent…’
Installation view of Lee Krasner: Living Colour at the Barbican Art Gallery, London (2019/2019) by Lee Krasner, Barbican Centre, and Tristan Fewings / Getty ImagesBarbican Centre
Krasner grew up against a backdrop of increasing liberation for women in the United States, who were granted the right to vote in August 1920.
When she was just 14, fuelled by this spur towards ambition and independence, Krasner decided to pursue an artistic career. First at Washington Irving High in Manhattan – at the time, the only school in Greater New York to offer an art course for girls – and then at Cooper Union and the National Academy of Design, Krasner learned to draw and paint in the manner of the period.
This conventional approach and style was to undergo a dramatic transformation in 1930, when she discovered Modern art. She fell in love with the work of Henri Matisse and Pablo Picasso after viewing their work at the Museum of Modern Art, which first opened its doors on 8 November 1929, describing the occasion as ‘an upheaval for me… an opening of a door’.
Krasner’s fascination with modernism led her to Hans Hofmann, the German artist and teacher who had known Picasso and Matisse in Paris, and had established his avant-garde school in New York in 1934.
Krasner immersed herself in Hofmann’s teachings on Cubism and the pair developed a mutual respect for each other’s practice – with Hofmann bestowing on one of Krasner’s paintings the (shockingly backhanded and sexist) praise:
‘This is so good, you would not know it was painted by a woman!’
Part of the New York art scene
Living in Greenwich Village in the 1930s placed Krasner at the heart of a flourishing downtown New York art scene, where she was one of only a handful of female artists. Working as a waitress at the Greenwich Village nightclub Sam Johnson’s, an artistic and literary hub, she met important figures including the writer Harold Rosenberg.Although the artistic scene was blossoming, the Great Depresion triggered by the 1929 Wall Street Crash triggered widespread poverty and a stagnant job market. Artists at this time struggled immensely to continue making work in this harsh climate.
Self-Portrait, c. 1928 © Pollock-Krasner Foundation (1928/1928) by Lee Krasner and The Pollock-Krasner FoundationBarbican Centre
‘I was brought up to be independent. I made no economic demands on my parents so in turn they let me be… I was not pressured by them, I was free to study art. It was the best thing that could have happened’
Lee Krasner at the WPA Pier, New York City c. 1940 © Fred Prater (1940/1940) by Lee Krasner and Lee Krasner PapersBarbican Centre
Krasner was politically active during the 1930s and 40s attending numerous protests. On 1 December 1936, Krasner joined a large group of artists and artists’ models in a strike to protest the imminent redundancy of 500 WPA workers.
Following violent clashes with the police, several protesters were arrested, including Krasner, who booked herself in as the American Impressionist painter Mary Cassat.
Abstract No. 2, 1947 © Pollock-Krasner Foundation (1947/1947) by Lee Krasner and The Pollock-Krasner FoundationBarbican Centre
Krasner & Abstract Expressionism
While Krasner was gaining recognition and respect within the New York art scene, she continued to rail against the discrimination rife within the male dominated world of artists, writers and critics in the city. Although she faced this with her usual tenacity, Krasner was frequently overshadowed by surrounding male artists – notably by her partner, and later husband, the artist Jackson Pollock.
As one of the first generation Abstract Expressionists, Krasner’s fight for recognition as a woman artist helped open up opportunities for future female Abstract painters including Grace Hartigan, Joan Mitchell and Helen Frankenthaler.
Lee Krasner in her New York studio, c. 1939. Photograph by Maurice Berezov (1939/1939) by Lee KrasnerBarbican Centre
‘Jackson always treated me as an artist… I was a painter before I knew him, and he knew that, and when we were together, I couldn’t have stayed with him one day if he didn’t treat me as a painter’
Installation view of Lee Krasner: Living Colour at the Barbican Art Gallery, London (2019/2019) by Lee Krasner, Barbican Centre, and Tristan Fewings / Getty ImagesBarbican Centre
Meeting in New York in 1941 as co-exhibitors in John Graham’s exhibition American and French Paintings (1942), Krasner and Pollock fell quickly in love and they married in October 1945.
The pair moved to a clapboard farmhouse on Fireplace Road in Springs, East Hampton.
A world away from the densely populated city, the couple were immersed in the peaceful nature of the local area, and Krasner described her new bucolic life as an ‘idyllic experience’.
Installation view of Lee Krasner: Living Colour at the Barbican Art Gallery, London featuring Composition, 1949 and Stop and Go, c.1949 (2019/2019) by Lee Krasner, Barbican Centre, and Tristan Fewings / Getty ImagesBarbican Centre
It was here that Krasner produced her ‘Little Images’, brilliant jewel-like compositions inspired by her picturesque natural surroundings. Executed on the table or the floor in an upstairs bedroom of the house, Krasner was confined to a small working space, while Pollock occupied a larger studio in a converted former barn.
Bald Eagle, 1955 © Pollock-Krasner Foundation (1955/1955) by Lee Krasner and The Pollock-Krasner FoundationBarbican Centre
While the blissful natural environment was stimulating to Krasner’s artistic practice – she had one of her most successful exhibitions to date in 1955, at Eleanor Ward’s Stable Gallery – cracks in her relationship with Pollock were becoming more prominent.
Installation view of Lee Krasner: Living Colour at the Barbican Art Gallery, London featuring Bird Talk, 1955 and Bald Eagle, 1955 (2019/2019) by Lee Krasner, Barbican Centre, and Tristan Fewings / Getty ImagesBarbican Centre
In 1956, Pollock began a public affair with the painter Ruth Kligman, and his alcoholism had worsened significantly. Invited by friends to visit them in Europe, Krasner took the opportunity for a break and left Pollock behind in East Hampton. While in France, Krasner received a telephone call to inform her that Pollock had crashed his car and died.
At the age of forty-seven, Krasner found herself a widow.
Prophecy, 1956 © Pollock-Krasner Foundation (1956/1956) by Lee Krasner and The Pollock-Krasner FoundationBarbican Centre
After Pollock
Despite the immense period of grief that followed Pollock’s death, Krasner’s artistic output never waned, and the paintings made at this time were described as a ‘stunning affirmation of life’.
‘Painting is not separate from life. It is one. It is like asking - do I want to live? My answer is yes - and I paint’
Installation view of Lee Krasner: Living Colour at the Barbican Art Gallery, London featuring The Eye is the First Circle, 1960 (2019/2019) by Lee Krasner, Barbican Centre, and Suzanne ZhangBarbican Centre
From the dark...
A year after Pollock’s death, Krasner decided to move her studio into the barn in Springs. Although it must have been a space loaded with painful memories, it was also the largest working area on the property which finally allowed her to work on a bigger scale.
The paintings swelled in size, with canvases reaching up to 4.4m in length.
Installation view of Lee Krasner: Living Colour at the Barbican Art Gallery, London featuring Assault on the Solar Plexus, 1961 (2019/2019) by Lee Krasner, Barbican Centre, and Suzanne ZhangBarbican Centre
Due to the lack of natural light, Krasner refused to work with colour and instead used a purposefully limited palette of raw and burnt umber on canvas.
Installation view of Lee Krasner: Living Colour at the Barbican Art Gallery, London (2019/2019) by Lee Krasner, Barbican Centre, and Suzanne ZhangBarbican Centre
Following the death of her mother in 1959, Krasner experienced severe insomnia and worked at night under the artificial light of her studio.
Lee Krasner standing on a ladder in front of The Gate, 1959 © Halley Erskine (1959/1959) by Halley Erskine and Lee KrasnerBarbican Centre
‘Aesthetically I am very much Lee Krasner. I am undergoing emotional, psychological, and artistic changes but I hold Lee Krasner right through’.
Installation view of Lee Krasner: Living Colour at the Barbican Art Gallery, London featuring Combat, 1965 (2019/2019) by Lee Krasner, Barbican Centre, and Suzanne ZhangBarbican Centre
Into colour...
In 1960, after overcoming her insomnia, Krasner allowed colour to burst back into her painting. A riot of dissonant hues emerged – fuschia pink, hot orange, vibrant Kelly green – in what Krasner called her ‘Primary Series’.
Continuing to work at a large scale – some of the canvases were almost 5 metres in length – these eye-watering colours confronted the viewer in vast unflinching planes.
Installation view of Lee Krasner: Living Colour at the Barbican Art Gallery, London featuring Icarus 1964 (2019/2019) by Lee Krasner, Barbican Centre, and Suzanne ZhangBarbican Centre
‘Painting is a revelation, an act of love… as a painter I can’t experience it any other way’
Krasner was working with frenetic energy at this point in her career, producing more than 160 paintings and experimental works on paper in 7 years.
Painting Portrait in Green in her studio, Springs, 1969 (1969/1969) by Lee KrasnerBarbican Centre
‘I couldn’t run out and do a one-woman job on the sexist aspects of the art world, continue my painting, and stay in the role I was in as Mrs Pollock… What I considered important was that I was able to work and other things would have to take their turn’
Installation view of Lee Krasner: Living Colour at the Barbican Art Gallery, London - featuring Portrait in Green, 1969 (2019/2019) by Lee Krasner, Barbican Centre, and Tristan Fewings / Getty ImagesBarbican Centre
Installation view of Lee Krasner: Living Colour at the Barbican Art Gallery, London featuring Palingenesis, 1971 (2019/2019) by Lee Krasner, Barbican Centre, and Suzanne ZhangBarbican Centre
Forthright, independent and strong, Krasner spent her life defending herself, her practice, and the work of her husband Jackson Pollock against an often cruel art world.
By the 1970s however, she was finally yielding the respect and recognition she so richly deserved, with the art critic Emily Genauer declaring in 1973: ‘surely she’s painting better now than ever before’.
Another key factor in the somewhat belated recognition of her work was the rise of second-wave feminism in the 1970s, about which Krasner quipped:
‘It’s too bad that the women’s liberation didn’t occur thirty years earlier in my life. It would have been of enormous assistance at that time’
Lee Krasner at the Whitney
In 1973, Lee Krasner: Large Paintings opened at the Whitney Museum of Art in New York, a significant milestone in Krasner’s professional career.
Installation view of Lee Krasner: Living Colour at the Barbican Art Gallery, London featuring Olympic, 1974 (2019/2019) by Lee Krasner, Barbican Centre, and Suzanne ZhangBarbican Centre
Curator of Krasner's Whitney exhibition, Marcia Tucker said:
‘Today, Lee Krasner is considered a prototype by many younger painters. She is encouraging and generous, tough and strong-willed, gregarious and adventurous, full of anecdotes and ideas. Most important, the enthusiasm for her work continues to grow as the contributions she has made are being fully realised’.
Installation view of Lee Krasner: Living Colour at the Barbican Art Gallery, London (2019/2019) by Lee Krasner, Barbican Centre, and Tristan Fewings / Getty ImagesBarbican Centre
Krasner’s significance as an inspiration for younger artists and practitioners cannot be understated. In our current moment, museums and galleries are seeking to address the lack of diversity within their collections, questioning the canonical view of art history by foregrounding the work of women.
Female artists are fetching record prices at auction and 2019 promises exhibitions of women were often marginalised and ignored at the expense of their male counterparts.
Extract from an essay by exhibition assistant, Charlotte Flint, Introducing Lee Krasner.
Lee Krasner: Living Colour celebrates the work and life of Lee Krasner (1908–1984), a pioneer of Abstract Expressionism. The first major presentation of her work in Europe for more than 50 years, 'Lee Krasner: Living Colour' tells the story of a formidable artist, whose importance has too often been eclipsed by her marriage to Jackson Pollock.
Lee Krasner: Living Colour took place at the Barbican Art Gallery in London from 30 May—1 September 2019.
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