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Black Mountain, Provincetown, and the Woman Paintings

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In 1948, Willem de Kooning taught at the Black Mountain College summer session in Asheville, North Carolina. Elaine thrived in this experimental ambience. She worked on Buckminster Fuller’s first geodesic dome, studied with Josef Albers, and played the ingénue in The Ruse of Medusa, choreographed by Merce Cunningham, with music by Erik Satie played by John Cage. While Bill labored over his breakthrough painting Asheville, Elaine produced rhythmic abstractions on wrapping paper. That fall, he painted Woman, the first of his grotesque female figures. It is impossible to fully parse the real-life and artistic influences that led to these paintings, but his deepening rift with Elaine was surely among them. The following summer, in Provincetown, Massachusetts, she studied with Hans Hofmann and socialized with friends. One of her self-portraits was included in a group exhibition at the Sidney Janis Gallery that fall; portraiture would change the course of her creative
Title: Black Mountain, Provincetown, and the Woman Paintings
Description:
In 1948, Willem de Kooning taught at the Black Mountain College summer session in Asheville, North Carolina.
Elaine thrived in this experimental ambience.
She worked on Buckminster Fuller’s first geodesic dome, studied with Josef Albers, and played the ingénue in The Ruse of Medusa, choreographed by Merce Cunningham, with music by Erik Satie played by John Cage.
While Bill labored over his breakthrough painting Asheville, Elaine produced rhythmic abstractions on wrapping paper.
That fall, he painted Woman, the first of his grotesque female figures.
It is impossible to fully parse the real-life and artistic influences that led to these paintings, but his deepening rift with Elaine was surely among them.
The following summer, in Provincetown, Massachusetts, she studied with Hans Hofmann and socialized with friends.
One of her self-portraits was included in a group exhibition at the Sidney Janis Gallery that fall; portraiture would change the course of her creative.

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