Jump to content

Alfred Russell (artist): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
m →‎External links: remove Category:Articles created via the Article Wizard per Wikipedia:Categories for discussion/Log/2019 January 6
Line 27: Line 27:
[[Category:21st-century American painters]]
[[Category:21st-century American painters]]
[[Category:University of Michigan alumni]]
[[Category:University of Michigan alumni]]
[[Category:Brooklyn College faculty]]

Revision as of 22:21, 4 December 2019

Alfred Russell (May 27, 1920 - September 22, 2007) was an artist who was a member of the early New York school of Abstract Expressionism. He exhibited in Paris and New York along with such well known painters as Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock, Ad Reinhardt and Mark Rothko. Later in life, Russell, disillusioned with abstraction, turned to figurative painting, with inspiration from the classical world.[1]

Russell, active in abstract circles in New York until 1953, was regularly included in the Whitney Annual as well as being part of seven exhibits of Museum of Modern Art's "Abstract Painting and Sculpture in America". In New York he had three solo shows at the Peridot Gallery as well as being in early Abstract Expressionist group shows at the Sidney Janis Gallery, the Kootz Gallery and at the Galerie de France in Paris [2]

Russell caustically renounced avant-garde abstraction in a Symposium on the Human Figure in 1953.[3] Thereafter, Russell painted mainly in classically and surrealistically figurative styles that still showed influence of abstractionism. His last New York exhibit was at the Tatischeff Gallery in 1979 as his later work was rarely exhibited. In addition to producing stylistically controversial work, after the 1950s, his latent anti-Semitism had become exposed and he had essentially destroyed any chance for a continuing career outside of academia.[4]

Receiving his M.F.A. at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor, he studied at the Art Student's League and earned a master's degree at Columbia University. Teaching at the M.F.A program at Brooklyn College from 1946 until 1976, when he retired, Russell influenced many younger artists in figurative painting including Gabriel Laderman.

He is represented in the collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Brooklyn Museum and the Detroit Institute of Arts.

References

  1. ^ http://www.parnasse.com/alfred.htm
  2. ^ Smith, Roberta (October 13, 2007). "Alfred Russell, Painter With a Classical Style, Dies at 87". The New York Times.
  3. ^ "Symposium: The Human Figure". Art Digest. November 15, 1953.
  4. ^ http://parnasse.com/alfred-russell-madness-article.html