Portland Public Library

Adolph Gottlieb, a retrospective, organized by Sanford Hirsch and Mary Davis MacNaughton ; text by Lawrence Alloway and Mary Davis MacNaughton

Label
Adolph Gottlieb, a retrospective, organized by Sanford Hirsch and Mary Davis MacNaughton ; text by Lawrence Alloway and Mary Davis MacNaughton
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 172-175)
Illustrations
illustrations
Index
no index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Adolph Gottlieb, a retrospective
Nature of contents
bibliographycatalogs
Oclc number
7685487
Responsibility statement
organized by Sanford Hirsch and Mary Davis MacNaughton ; text by Lawrence Alloway and Mary Davis MacNaughton
Summary
This is a superbly illustrated retrospective of Amerian Abstract Expressionist painter, Adolph Gottlieb. In 1920, dissatisfied with the challenges of high school, Adolph Gottlieb enrolled in evening classes at the Art students League of New York, where he made friends with a group of like-minded artists - including Mark Rothko, Milton Avery and Chaim Gross - and from where he started to shape his unique visual character. Over the next four decades, Gottlieb would go on to gain both critical and popular acclaim and, in the process, become one of America's foremost contemporary artist, and a founder - along with his good friends Mark Rothko, Louis Schanker and others - of the American Abstract Expressionist movement. "Adolph Gottlieb: A Retrospective" is a superbly illustrated volume providing readers with a comprehensive overview of Gottlieb's career, from his initial paintings in the early 1920s to his most famous works of the 1950s
Content
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