Hard-edge painting is a tendency in late 1950s and 1960s art that is closely related to Post-painterly abstraction and Color Field Painting.
It describes an abstract style that combines the clear composition of
geometric abstraction with the intense color and bold, unitary forms of
color field painting. Although it was first identified with Californian
artists, today the phrase is used to describe one of the most
distinctive tendencies in abstract painting throughout the United States
in the 1960s.
Key Ideas:
- Hard-edge abstraction was part of a general tendency to move away from the expressive qualities of gestural abstraction. Many painters also sought to avoid the shallow, post-Cubist space of Willem de Kooning's work, and instead adopted the open fields of color seen in the work of .
- Hard-edge painting is known for its economy of form, fullness of color, impersonal execution, and smooth surface planes.
- The term "hard-edge abstraction" was devised by Californian art critic Jules Langsner, and was initially intended to title a 1959 exhibition that included four West Coast artists - Karl Benjamin, John McLaughlin, Frederick Hammersley and Lorser Feitelson. Although, later, the style was often referred to as "California hard-edge," and these four artists became synonymous with the movement, Langsner eventually decided to title the show Four Abstract Classicists (1959), as he felt that the style marked a classical turn away from the romanticism of Abstract Expressionism.
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