Willem de Kooning Still Dazzles
A new major retrospective recounts the artist's seven-decade career and never-ending experimentation
- By Mark Stevens
- Smithsonian magazine, October 2011, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 4)
In the ’50s, many young artists had imitated de Kooning; critics called them “second generation” painters—that is, followers of pioneers like de Kooning. In the ’60s, however, the art world was rapidly changing as Pop and Minimal artists such as Andy Warhol and Donald Judd brought a cool and knowing irony to art that was foreign to de Kooning’s lush sensibility. These young artists did not want to be “second generation,” and they began to dismiss the older painter’s work as too messy, personal, European or, as de Kooning might put it, old hat.
In 1963, as de Kooning approached the age of 60, he left New York City for Springs with Joan Ward and their daughter. His life on Long Island was difficult. He was given to melancholy, and he resented being treated like a painter left behind by history. He still went on periodic benders, which sometimes ended with his admission to Southampton Hospital. But his art continued to develop in extraordinary new ways.
De Kooning immersed himself in the Long Island countryside. He built a large, eccentric studio that he likened to a ship, and he became a familiar figure around Springs, bicycling down the sandy roads. His figurative work of the ’60s was often disturbing; his taste for caricature and the grotesque, apparent in Woman I, was also found in such sexually charged works as The Visit (1966-67), a wet and juicy picture of a grinning frog-woman lying on her back. In his more abstract pictures, the female body and the landscape increasingly seemed to fuse in the loose, watery paint.
De Kooning also began making extraordinarily tactile figurative sculptures: Clamdigger (1972) seemed pulled from the primordial ooze. The paintings that followed, such as ...Whose Name was Writ in Water (1975), were no less tactile but did not have the same muddiness. Ecstatic eruptions of water, light, reflection, paint and bodily sensation—perhaps a reflection, in part, of de Kooning’s passion for the last great love of his life, Emilie Kilgore—the paintings look like nothing else in American art. And yet, in the late ’70s, de Kooning abruptly, and typically, ended the series. The pictures, he said, were coming too easily.
It was also in the late ’70s that de Kooning first began exhibiting signs of dementia. His wife, Elaine, who came back into his life at this time, began to monitor him carefully. Increasingly, as the ’80s wore on, he would depend on assistants to move his canvases and lay out his paints. Some critics have disparaged the increasingly spare paintings of this period. Elderfield, however, treats the late style with respect. In the best of the late works, de Kooning seems to be following his hand, the inimitable brush stroke freed of any burden and yet lively as ever. “Then there is a time in life,” he said in 1960, as he wearied of New York City, “when you just take a walk: And you walk in your own landscape.”
De Kooning died on March 19, 1997, at his Long Island studio, at the age of 92. He traveled an enormous distance during his long life, moving between Europe and America, old master and modernist, city and country. De Kooning’s art, said the painter Robert Dash, “always seems to be saying goodbye.” De Kooning himself liked to say, “You have to change to stay the same.”
Mark Stevens is the co-author, with his wife Annalyn Swan, of the Pulitzer Prize-winning de Kooning: An American Master.
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Comments (7)
Does anyone know where I can find examples of the work of Joan Ward please? I have 2 lithographs(?) signed by a J Ward with an inscription - from Bill & Joan Ward - along the bottom and would like to know if it could possibly be the same artist.
Posted by Lesley on February 25,2012 | 01:13 PM
In the picture of de Kooning standing in his studio in 1985 that appeared in the magazine as well as the online gallery, there is a painting behind him showing a man sitting cross-legged. What painting is that?
Posted by j.andrew on November 23,2011 | 02:12 PM
My mother used to babysit for Lisa de Kooning years ago. We have a portrait that Joan Ward (and a little help from de Kooning) painted. Really nice piece. Anyone interested in seeing....let me know.
Posted by Michele on October 12,2011 | 09:32 PM
I remember art critics writing disparagingly about the way he was used in his old age, that canvases were placed in front of him & the loaded brush practically placed in his hand as his mind disappeared into dementia. The best that could be said was that he last paintings were versions of his earlier works, the worst was that it was simply childish rubbish from a childish mind.
Posted by Will on October 10,2011 | 06:02 PM
To see the paintings go to:
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/multimedia/photos/?c=y&articleID=129528363&page=1
Posted by Carol Griffin on October 9,2011 | 10:39 PM
Click on the picture instead. I tried the words and got the same result but clicking on the picture brought the photos up
Posted by moira on October 6,2011 | 04:03 PM
I am a subscriber to your magazine, and in the article on de Kooning I note the insert which invites to "view paintings from the extensive collection..." by clicking on smithsonian.com/dekooning. When I click on that, I see the same article as in the magazine, and no pictures at all. Am I doing something wrong, or why am I failing to see those paintings?
Posted by Peter R. Lantos on October 1,2011 | 05:37 PM