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Pace Wildenstein has done it again: Its revisionist exhibition of Adolph Gottlieb’s abstract-surreal “Pictographs” of the 1940s, borrowed extensively from institutional collections, follows on the ...
As the bloody horrors of World War II escalated in the early 1940s, American painter Adolph Gottlieb hunted for a deeper, more visceral and spiritual language for his art, an expression that would ...
A pictograph is a kind of visual morpheme (like a hieroglyph), at once diagrammatic, imagistic, and "graphic." In the paintings of Adolph Gottlieb, pictographs range from geometric squiggles to ...
Adolph Gottlieb: Pictographs 1941-1951 remains on view at PaceWildenstein, 32 East 57th Street, through Dec. 31, and is accompanied by an excellent, well-illustrated catalog.
"Adolph Gottlieb: Sculptor" is the second time in two years the University of Michigan Museum of Art has mounted an A-list display of A-list talent working in an artform other than his historic ...
Adolph Gottlieb was a prominent American painter and member of the first generation of Abstract Expressionists. Characterized by an idiosyncratic use of abstraction that utilized pictographs and ...
The prizes at big international art shows are rightly suspect when given to some eye-catching novelty by a local unknown—and rightly coveted when given for work that has evolved over years of ...