WASHINGTON, DC.- This February,
The Phillips Collection pulls back the curtain on American abstract expressionism to reveal a little-known but captivating story that focuses on the relationship between three of the movements seminal players: American painter Jackson Pollock (19121956); American artist and patron Alfonso Ossorio (19161990); and French painter Jean Dubuffet (19011985). Featuring approximately 53 paintings and works on paper from 1945 to 1958, the exhibition illuminates a key moment in postwar artone that was profoundly influenced by the artists transcontinental dialogue. It reunites a number of works by Pollock and Dubuffet from Ossorios collection for the first time since they were dispersed after his death in 1990. The exhibition is on view February 9 through May 12, 2013.
Angels, Demons, and Savages diverges from the conventional history of American abstract expressionism to unravel a more nuanced narrative infused with artistic camaraderie and mutual admiration. The exhibition reveals visual affinities between the three artists work, tracing the impact of Dubuffets art brut, the experimental spirit of Pollocks technique, and Ossorios figurative language. As the focal point of the art world shifted from Europe to America, the exchange between two of its leading protagonistsJackson Pollock and Jean Dubuffetand the less known but equally critical participant Alfonso Ossorio, helped bridge the ever-widening gap between the continents.
It is wonderfully appropriate that this exhibition unfolds at The Phillips Collection, says Dorothy Kosinski, director and exhibition co-curator. It mirrors a key character of Duncan Phillipss lifelong collecting projecthis desire to champion American modernism and frame this art with an international perspective.
Alfonso Ossorio, who is virtually absent from standard art history texts, is the central figure in this story and the exhibition pays tribute to him. One of the most colorful figures in postwar American art, his altruism and generosity have obscured his own work as a painter. Heir to a vast Philippine sugar fortune, Ossorio lived for most of his creative life in East Hampton, N.Y. Born in the Philippines to a Spanish father and Chinese-Filipino mother, and educated in England and the United States, he started to exhibit regularly in New York in 1941. He was a multicultural artist who synthesized surrealism, abstract expressionism, and art brutart by prisoners, the insane, and other so-called outsiderswith his Hispanic and Asian roots.
An artist and collector with a lively mind and entrepreneurial spirit, Ossorio was attracted early on to the work of both Jackson Pollock and Jean Dubuffet. He avidly collected their work and developed collegial friendships with both artists. Ossorio met Pollock and his wife Lee Krasner in 1949 through the gallerist Betty Parsons with whom Ossorio had exhibited since 1941. In 1950, at Pollocks suggestion, Ossorio traveled to Paris to meet Dubuffet, an artist with whom he developed a deep kinship and rich correspondence. With Dubuffets help, Ossorio had several shows of his own work in Paris. From 1952 to 1961, he housed and exhibited at his East Hampton estate Dubuffets extensive collection of art brut. Ossorio amassed hundreds of works by Pollock and Dubuffet, including one of Pollocks most celebrated paintings, Number 1, 1950 (Lavender Mist), which is featured in the exhibition.
The exhibition debunks the mythology of Jackson Pollock as a solitary genius. Contrary to popular belief, Pollock was keenly aware of what other artists were doing and was influenced by those he befriended and worked with throughout his abbreviated career. In 1950, Pollock worked in Ossorios studio while Ossorio was in the Philippines painting a mural for his familys estate. During that time, Pollock received shipments of Ossorios wax and ink drawings from the Philippines and spent time studying them. It was at this time that Pollock abandoned his abstract designs and produced the Black Paintings, a series of figurative drawings created on unprimed cotton duck using sticks or hardened brushes as well as basting syringes and black industrial paint.
In recent years, The Phillips Collection has acquired a number of works by Ossorio that are showcased in the exhibition, including a seminal painting from the 1950s, The Family. In addition, the museum received a major work on paper, Reforming Figure (1950), and an assemblage, Excelsior (1960), part of the powerful series Ossorio called Congregations. Ossorios Five Brothers (1950), acquired by Duncan Phillips in 1951, and Pollocks Collage and Oil (c. 1951), acquired in 1958, are also on view in the exhibition.