An Uncertain Power: Post-War America American Art All mothers are giants - Jackson Pollock The Absent Father, LeRoy Manual Arts High School 1928 - 30 Krishnamurti The American Man Hut An American Pantheism Life with the Bentons Art Students League 1930 - 32 A More Dynamic Side to Thomas Benton All in a Day's Work, 1935 - 38 Pretty negative stuff so far - Jackson Pollock Birth, 1938 - 41 We're all of us influenced by Freud, I guess. I've been a Jungian for a long time. - Jackson Pollock Bird A Father Figure John Graham Lee Krasner The record of all human intercourse is perpetuated through the medium of symbols. - John Graham Peggy Horror Vacui: Mural, 1943 Radical Art The Hunters of the Plains In the room the women come and go. Talking of Michelangelo - T. S. Eliot A Comforting Ordinariness The Pantheist Emerges Reshuffling the Deck Peggy's Departure On the Floor Pollock Speaks The Dripper Emerges Astral Beauty Night Vision Pollock by Panel Number 1A, 1948 The Paradox of Summertime (Number 9A) 'Jackson Pollock: Is he the greatest living artist in the United States?' - Life, 8 October 1949 Seasons Change: Autumn Rhythm (Number 30) The Painting Overexposed Pollock's Viewpoint Coffee will be served in the living room - Lee Krasner Success and Glamour New York is brutal - Jackson Pollock Cedar Tavern A Change of Gallery The Story of Blue Poles, 1952 That Place Called Home - Springs Portrait and a Dream Final Fling Waiting for Godot 'Rage, rage against the dying of the light'
Catherine Ingram obtained a First Class Honours degree at Glasgow
University. After an MA in 19th-Century Art at the Courtauld
Institute of Art, Catherine became a graduate scholar at Trinity
College, Oxford. After finishing her D.Phil, she was made a Prize
Fellow at Magdalen College, Oxford.
A native of Scotland, Peter Arkle lives and works in New York. He
creates illustrations for books, magazines and ads for a wide range
of clients, including Amnesty International, The New Yorker, The
New York Times, The Guardian and Esquire.
"Eloquent, informative, and amusing." - School Library Journal
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