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In Focus

These In Focus studies shed new light on works of post-war American art in Tate’s collection, providing insights into their making and meaning that revise traditional ways of understanding American modernism. Written by specialists from different disciplines, each study comprises linked essays that explore the work’s history and significance in depth, revealing how shifting institutional and ideological contexts change how works of art are understood and valued over time.

  • Bernard Perlin, Orthodox Boys 1948

    Orthodox Boys 1948 by Bernard Perlin

    Aaron Rosen

    Tate’s first acquisition of a work by a contemporary American artist after 1945, Orthodox Boys is charged with the anxieties and aspirations of Jews in post-war New York. Its graffitied wall offers a constellation of names from the artist’s own life, examined here in depth for the first time.

  • Norman Lewis, Cathedral 1950, Tate L03741

    Cathedral 1950 by Norman Lewis

    Andrianna Campbell

    In 1956 Norman Lewis’s Cathedral 1950 became one of the first works by an African American artist to be shown at the Venice Biennale.

  • Barnett Newman, Adam 1951, 1952

    Adam 1951, 1952 by Barnett Newman

    Michael Schreyach

    The American abstract expressionist artist Barnett Newman considered his painting Adam 1951, 1952 a major achievement in his efforts to visualise what he called the ‘metaphysical content’ of art.

  • Theodore Roszak, The Unknown Political Prisoner (Defiant and Triumphant) 1952

    The Unknown Political Prisoner (Defiant and Triumphant) 1952 by Theodore Roszak

    Alex J. Taylor

    This small model for an unrealised monument was the first work of post-war American sculpture to enter Tate’s collection.

  • Fig.1 Sam Francis, Around the Blues 1957, 1962–3

    Around the Blues 1957, 1962–3 by Sam Francis

    Natalie Adamson

    Around the Blues 1957, 1962–3 was painted when Sam Francis was travelling the world and developing a new approach to abstract space.

  • Hans Hofmann, Pompeii 1959

    Pompeii 1959 by Hans Hofmann

    Emily Warner

    Pompeii 1959 gained an international reputation in the 1960s, representing Hans Hofmann and his ‘slab’ paintings across the US, Europe and South America.

  • Louise Nevelson, Black Wall 1959

    Black Wall 1959 by Louise Nevelson

    Alex J. Taylor

    Tracing the early evolution of Black Wall, this In Focus reveals Nevelson as a collector and scavenger on the streets of New York, and features a newly digitised interview with the artist by critic David Sylvester.

  • Franz Kline Meryon 1960–1

    Meryon 1960–1 by Franz Kline

    AnnMarie Perl

    Franz Kline’s late work Meryon 1960–1 calls into question established ideas about abstract expressionism, including its essential ‘Americanness’.

  • Larry Rivers, Parts of the Face: French Vocabulary Lesson 1961

    Parts of the Face: French Vocabulary Lesson 1961 by Larry Rivers

    Sophie Cras

    Through analysis of source material, the artist’s creative process and new archival resources, this In Focus investigates new interpretations for this pivotal painting’s reception in Paris at a time of artistic and political turbulence.

  • Kenneth Noland, Gift 1961–2

    Gift 1961–2 by Kenneth Noland

    Alex J. Taylor

    Given by the artist to prominent art critic Clement Greenberg, Gift exemplifies Greenberg’s taste for high modernist abstraction. This In Focus offers a new reading of the painting in relation to the social and cultural mores of 1960s America, from the cold war space race to popular psychology.

  • James Rosenquist Silo 1963–4

    Silo 1963–4 by James Rosenquist

    Alex J. Taylor

    This In Focus presents Rosenquist’s Silo as a reflection on the image of the female consumer in the 1950s and 1960s, casting its prominent sculptural ‘T-zone’ as a metaphor for taste, consumption and advertising’s persuasive tactics.

  • Fig.1 Sue Fuller String Composition 128 1964

    String Composition 128 1964 by Sue Fuller

    Alex J. Taylor

    Sue Fuller’s String Composition 128 1964 testifies to the often overlooked influence of craft traditions on the development of modernist abstraction.

  • Blood of a Poet Box 1965–8 by Eleanor Antin

    Lucy Bradnock

    Blood of a Poet Box 1965–8 was Eleanor Antin’s first conceptual artwork, introducing the themes of identity, originality and genius to her artistic practice.

  • Willem de Kooning, Women Singing II 1966

    Women Singing II 1966 by Willem de Kooning

    Valerie Hellstein

    This In Focus explores Women Singing II – a painting inspired by pop singers that Willem de Kooning saw on television – as the product of a shifting, mutable act of remembering and an iterative creative process involving drawn, traced and recycled imagery.

  • Dennis Oppenheim, Salt Flat 1968

    Salt Flat 1968 by Dennis Oppenheim

    John R. Blakinger

    This In Focus explores Oppenheim’s Salt Flat through the systems aesthetics of critic Jack Burnham, showing how the artist’s seemingly straightforward action of spreading salt on a parking lot and its deadpan documentation are in fact part of a complex system.

  • Liliana Porter, Wrinkle 1968

    Wrinkle 1968 by Liliana Porter

    Sophie Halart

    Liliana Porter’s Wrinkle 1968 recasts printmaking as a conceptual art form rather than a labour-intensive craft.

  • Jennifer Bartlett, Surface Substitution on 36 Plates 1972

    Surface Substitution on 36 Plates 1972 by Jennifer Bartlett

    Kirsten Swenson

    This In Focus presents the first in-depth study of this key work of conceptual art from the 1970s, examining Bartlett’s preoccupation with mathematical concepts, systems theory, industrial materials and mechanised processes – as well as with individual craftsmanship and autographical mark marking.

  • Gordon Matta-Clark, Walls Paper 1972

    Walls Paper 1972 by Gordon Matta-Clark

    Sandra Zalman

    First displayed in a partially dilapidated artist-run space in New York, Walls Paper’s photo-silkscreens of cracking, crumbling urban walls mirrored the site’s own deterioration. This In Focus positions the installation as a multi-dimensional collage that addresses the meaning of ownership, development and decay in the modern city.

  • Barkley L. Hendricks, Family Jules: NNN (No Naked Niggahs) 1974

    Family Jules: NNN (No Naked Niggahs) 1974 by Barkley L. Hendricks

    Anna Arabindan-Kesson

    Offering the first in-depth study of this key nude portrait by Barkley L. Hendricks, this In Focus is enriched throughout by an interview with the artist conducted several months before his death in April 2017.

  • Larry Sultan and Mike Mandel, Untitled 1977, printed 2001, from the photobook Evidence 1977

    Evidence 1977 by Larry Sultan and Mike Mandel

    Andrew Witt

    Drawing together the history of California, science fiction, technological experimentation and catastrophe, this In Focus examines how Larry Sultan and Mike Mandel’s Evidence complicates the conventions and assumptions of photographic truth.

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