Portrait of Harold Rosenberg
1959
Mixed media on gouache
23.5 x 18 inches (59.7 x 45.7 cm)
Initialed lower left and dated lower right
Ex-collection:
The estate of the artist and by descent until the present
About the Painting:
The most vocal proponent of the Abstract Expressionist movement and the originator of the term “action painting,” Harold Rosenberg was renowned for his fiercely intellectual criticism on art, politics, and society. He considered Abstract Expressionism “the most vigorous and original movement in art in the history of this nation.” Locating the work of art’s supreme value in the act of creation, Rosenberg positioned himself squarely opposite the formalist critic Clement Greenberg. His 1952 article for ARTnews, entitled “The American Action Painters,” was adopted as Abstract Expressionism’s manifesto and had a profound effect on the artistic landscape of 1950s New York.
Rosenberg was a lifelong friend of Abstract Expressionists Willem and Elaine de Kooning. If Willem was “the king of art” for Rosenberg the singular genius against whom all others were measured then Elaine was his educator, the person who taught him how to develop his eye. Rosenberg and Elaine de Kooning shared a relationship that was stimulated by involved intellectual conversations and debates on artistic theory. Her energetically painted portrait of him merges portraiture’s demand for likeness with Abstract Expressionism’s demand for intuitively created surfaces.