Adolph Gottlieb
Adolph Gottlieb (March 14, 1903 – March 4, 1974) was an American abstract expressionist painter, sculptor, and printmaker whose work emphasized symbolic abstraction and elemental contrasts.[1][2] Born in New York City to immigrant parents, Gottlieb rejected his family's stationery business to study art, leaving high school in 1920 and traveling to Europe in 1921–1922 to engage with modern movements like Fauvism and Cubism.[1] He debuted with a solo exhibition in 1930 and co-founded The Ten in 1935, a group advocating expressionist and abstract painting amid the Great Depression's economic challenges for artists.[3] In 1943, he co-authored an open letter in The New York Times with Mark Rothko, articulating abstract expressionism's rejection of European traditions in favor of mythic, universal symbols to address modern alienation.[2] Gottlieb's mature style evolved through distinct series: Pictographs (from 1941), featuring compartmentalized grids of archetypal symbols drawn from primitive art, Surrealism, and Jungian psychology; Imaginary Landscapes (from 1951), with stark horizon lines evoking spatial depth; and Bursts (from 1956), characterized by a central ovoid form amid vertical drips and expressive strokes, simplifying composition to heighten tension between void and energy.[1][2] These works positioned him as a pioneer in the New York School, influencing subsequent color-field abstraction through his focus on scale, color, and pictorial autonomy.[2] Major accolades included the Grande Prêmio at the 1963 São Paulo Bienal and retrospectives at the Whitney Museum and Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in 1968, affirming his contributions despite health setbacks like a 1962 heart attack and 1971 stroke, after which he adapted to paint with limited mobility until his death.[1]Biography
Early Life and Family Background
Adolph Gottlieb was born on March 14, 1903, in New York City to Emil Gottlieb (1873–1947) and Elsie Berger Gottlieb (1881–1958), parents of Jewish heritage whose families had immigrated as children from the Bohemia region of what was then Austria-Hungary.[1][4] The family initially resided on East 10th Street, opposite Tompkins Square Park, in Manhattan's Lower East Side, a densely populated enclave for Jewish immigrants during the early 20th century.[5][6] As the eldest of three children and the only son, Gottlieb grew up with two younger sisters, Edna and Rhoda, in a household shaped by the economic and cultural transitions of second-generation Jewish Americans.[5] His father, Emil, owned a stationery business, reflecting the modest entrepreneurial pursuits common among immigrant-descended families in the garment and trade districts of New York.[7] Gottlieb attended local public schools, but showed early disinterest in formal education, eventually leaving high school to assist in his father's enterprise before pursuing artistic training.[5][8]Education and Early Travels
Gottlieb, dissatisfied with traditional high school education, left formal schooling early to work in his father's garment business before pursuing artistic training.[8] In 1920, at age 17, he enrolled at the Art Students League of New York, studying painting under instructors Robert Henri and John Sloan until 1921.[9] These early lessons emphasized realist techniques and urban subject matter, influencing his initial approach to figuration.[2] Seeking broader exposure, Gottlieb worked his passage on a merchant ship to Europe in 1921, arriving first in France where he spent six months in Paris visiting museums and galleries.[3] He then traveled through central Europe, including extended visits to Berlin, Munich, Dresden, Vienna, and Prague, immersing himself in European art collections that exposed him to modern movements.[1] This 1921–1923 sojourn, undertaken without formal enrollment abroad, marked a pivotal self-directed phase, fostering independence from academic structures.[10] Upon returning to New York in 1923, Gottlieb continued his education at Parsons School of Design, alongside briefer studies at Cooper Union and the Educational Alliance Art School.[5] These institutions provided practical skills in design and drawing, though he prioritized experiential learning over prolonged classroom instruction.[11]Formative Career Years (1920s–1930s)
Following his brief studies at the Art Students League of New York in 1920 under John Sloan and with lectures from Robert Henri, Gottlieb traveled to Europe in 1921 aboard the Steamer Zeeland, arriving in Paris where he resided at 269 Rue Saint Jacques for three to six months.[1] There, he attended classes at the Académie de la Grande Chaumière and visited the Musée du Louvre daily, encountering modern works such as Fernand Léger's Three Women, which contributed to his early exposure to European avant-garde developments.[1] In 1922, he continued traveling through central Europe, including Berlin, Munich, Dresden, Vienna, and Prague, before returning to New York from Hamburg on August 18.[1] Upon his return in 1923, Gottlieb resumed studies at the Art Students League with Sloan and Henry Schnackenberg while completing evening high school, during which he formed key connections with artists including Barnett Newman and John Graham.[1] Throughout the mid- to late 1920s, Gottlieb developed his professional network and began exhibiting, sharing a studio with figures like Chaim Gross, Louis Schanker, Moses Soyer, and Isaac Soyer in 1920, and later meeting Milton Avery and Mark Rothko around 1928–1929.[1] He showed work at the Opportunity Gallery in 1928–1929 and won first prize in the Dudensing National Competition alongside Konrad Cramer, leading to his debut solo exhibition of 18 paintings at Dudensing Gallery on May 1, 1930—the first such show for any of his contemporaries in the emerging New York abstract circle.[1] By then, he had rented a studio on East Broadway shared with Newman, marking his commitment to fine art over his brief stint in the family stationery business.[1] Additional group shows followed at Opportunity Gallery in May and June 1931, solidifying his presence in New York galleries amid the economic pressures of the Great Depression.[1] In the 1930s, Gottlieb's career gained momentum through institutional affiliations and practical support mechanisms, including his 1933 name change to Adolph, friendship with David Smith, and initiation of printmaking using a second-hand etching press.[1] He co-founded The Ten in 1935, a collective of expressionist and abstract painters including Rothko and William Baziotes that opposed prevailing social realism and held annual exhibitions through 1940 to promote avant-garde work.[3][9] That year, he exhibited at Gallery Secession and traveled to Europe, acquiring five African sculptures in Paris that influenced his emerging interest in primitivist motifs.[1] Joining the Artists’ Union, WPA Easel Division, and American Artists’ Congress in 1936 provided financial stability during summers painting with Avery in locations like Three Bridges, New Jersey; he resigned from the WPA in October 1937 after stints in Fire Island, New York, and Bondeville, Vermont, followed by an eight-month residence in Tucson, Arizona.[1] Returning to New York in July 1938, Gottlieb continued exhibiting and won a nationwide mural competition in 1939, executing a work for the Yerington, Nevada, post office while summering in Woodstock, New York—evidencing his adaptation to public commissions amid private exploration of symbolic abstraction.[1]Emergence in Abstract Expressionism (1940s)
During the early 1940s, Adolph Gottlieb shifted toward abstraction by initiating his Pictograph series in 1941, featuring compartmentalized grids filled with archaic symbols, primitive motifs, and cryptic icons drawn from Native American art, Oceanic artifacts, and ancient mythology, as a means to evoke subconscious depths amid the turmoil of World War II and its existential threats.[12][13] These works rejected representational clarity in favor of a pseudo-language of signs, aligning with emerging Abstract Expressionist emphases on myth, tragedy, and the irrational, influenced by Surrealist explorations of the psyche and prehistoric forms.[14][8] Gottlieb's first Pictographs were displayed in 1942 at the Artists Gallery in New York, marking an early public assertion of his mature style within the nascent New York avant-garde.[8] In June 1943, collaborating with Mark Rothko for an exhibition of the Federation of Modern Painters and Sculptors, Gottlieb co-signed a defiant letter to New York Times critic Edward Alden Jewell, rebutting charges of obscurity in their "globalism" paintings by insisting that true art must confront profound human agonies through mythic abstraction rather than superficial novelty or literalism.[15][16] This manifesto-like statement, published on June 13, 1943, encapsulated proto-Abstract Expressionist ideology, prioritizing emotional universality and primal forces over decorative appeal.[17] Key Pictographs from mid-decade, such as Apparition (1945) and Augury (1945), intensified this approach with dense, textured assemblages of fragmented forms and ambiguous narratives, often evoking primordial rituals or apocalyptic visions without resolving into coherent scenes.[18][13] By the late 1940s, Gottlieb began experimenting with simplified dualities in works like Man Looking at Woman (1949), foreshadowing his Imaginary Landscapes while solidifying his role among New York's abstract pioneers, including Rothko and Barnett Newman, through shared commitments to scale, gesture, and psychological depth.[14][19] These developments positioned Gottlieb as a foundational figure in Abstract Expressionism's coalescence, distinct from gestural peers like Jackson Pollock by his structured symbolism yet unified in rejecting European traditions for an autonomous American idiom.[20]Peak Productivity and Style Shifts (1950s)
In the early 1950s, Adolph Gottlieb transitioned from his Pictograph series, which had relied on compartmentalized symbols within a grid, to the Imaginary Landscapes (1951–1957), marking a pivotal stylistic shift toward expansive, horizon-divided compositions evoking chaotic primordial environments through swirling forms, bold colors, and implied depth without literal representation.[9] These works, often on canvases scaled to several feet in width, abandoned structured grids to prioritize dynamic color fields and gestural energy, reflecting Gottlieb's interest in evoking emotional and elemental forces akin to natural cataclysms.[2] This period saw heightened output, with Gottlieb producing dozens of such paintings amid the Abstract Expressionist movement's emphasis on scale and spontaneity, including key examples like Homestead on the Plain (1951), which juxtaposes earthy tones and abstract motifs to suggest vast, untamed terrains.[21] By mid-decade, further experimentation yielded transitional pieces like Labyrinth III (1954), a sixteen-foot-wide all-over composition of interwoven lines and hues that bridged the turbulent landscapes to more simplified abstraction, demonstrating Gottlieb's iterative refinement of form over symbolic density.[22] A major exhibition in 1954 at a New York gallery showcased approximately 20 mature paintings, solidifying critical reception of this evolving style and underscoring his productivity during a decade when he averaged multiple large-scale works annually.[23] The late 1950s brought another abrupt shift with the introduction of the Burst series in 1957, featuring vertical formats—typically over ten feet tall—dominated by a singular orb-like form hovering above vigorous, dripping brushstrokes, symbolizing conflicts between the contained and the explosive or known and unknown.[24][25][26] These paintings reduced motifs to essential dualities, amplifying scale and chromatic intensity for monumental impact, as seen in early Bursts like Blast (1957), while maintaining ties to landscape evocation through implied verticality.[27] This evolution aligned with Gottlieb's rejection of prior compartmentalization, favoring raw gesture and space, and culminated in international recognition, including a 1959 Paris exhibition of New York School works that highlighted his Bursts alongside earlier series.[28] Overall, the decade represented Gottlieb's most prolific phase, with stylistic pivots driven by formal experimentation rather than external trends, yielding over a hundred paintings that advanced Abstract Expressionism's gestural abstraction.[29]Later Years and Artistic Reflections (1960s–1970s)
During the 1960s, Adolph Gottlieb continued to refine his Burst series, which he had initiated in the late 1950s, emphasizing large-scale canvases with an abstract, often circular or elliptical form positioned in the upper register above vertical, dripping elements that evoked themes of conflict, suspension, and gravitational pull.[30] This period saw Gottlieb resuming printmaking in 1966 through collaborations with Marlborough Graphics, producing serigraphs and lithographs, as well as venturing into sculpture and tapestries, such as the 1968 Burst tapestry and Petaloid sculpture.[1] Exhibitions of his work, including solo shows at Marlborough Gallery featuring 1970 drawings, underscored his sustained productivity and formal ambition amid evolving Abstract Expressionist circles.[28] A heart attack in December 1962 marked an early health setback, but Gottlieb's determination persisted until a stroke in April 1971 confined him to a wheelchair and paralyzed his left side.[1] Undeterred, he adapted by painting with his right hand and, in the summer of 1973, produced 54 monotypes—experimental prints created by inking a plate and pressing paper directly onto it—serving as a capstone to his career with simplified, gestural forms echoing Burst motifs.[30] These final works, completed until the last week of February 1974, demonstrated his resilience, though he was hospitalized shortly thereafter for emphysema treatment. Gottlieb died on March 4, 1974, in New York City at age 70.[1] In artistic reflections from this era, Gottlieb rejected populist conceptions of art's role, articulating in a 1973 Art News interview his aim "to get rid of the idea that art is for everybody," prioritizing personal expression over broad accessibility.[1] His Bursts, he noted elsewhere, aimed to convey "fundamental conflicts" inherent in human experience, distilled through abstraction without ideological dogma, affirming painting as an act of individual confrontation with form and nature.[25] This stance reflected a commitment to art's autonomy, uncompromised by external validation, even as physical limitations intensified in his final years.[31]Artistic Development and Techniques
Key Influences and Pictographic Period
Adolph Gottlieb drew key influences from primitivist sources, including African, Oceanic, Native American, and prehistoric art forms, which informed his interest in raw, symbolic expression unbound by narrative convention.[9][32] European Surrealism also shaped his approach, particularly its emphasis on the subconscious and automatic techniques, alongside Carl Jung's concept of the collective unconscious as a reservoir of universal archetypes.[33][34] These elements converged in Gottlieb's rejection of social realism—prevalent in his 1930s Works Progress Administration murals—and his pivot toward abstraction as a means to convey primal human experiences amid World War II's existential disruptions.[35][36] The Pictographic period, from 1941 to 1951, marked Gottlieb's initial foray into Abstract Expressionism through a series of oil paintings characterized by invented pictographs—abstract symbols stacked in irregular, grid-like compartments reminiscent of ancient hieroglyphs or cave markings.[12][32] Works such as Pictograph-Symbol (c. 1950) and Apparition (1945) exemplify this phase, with compartmentalized motifs evoking fragmented myths or psychological fragments, typically rendered on small-to-medium canvases (e.g., 40 x 26 inches for many examples) using thin glazes and gestural lines to maintain an enigmatic, unresolved quality.[36][18] Gottlieb intentionally cultivated rough, unfinished surfaces in these paintings, viewing them as prompts for viewer dialogue rather than fixed narratives, a deliberate contrast to polished academic styles.[12] This period's symbolism drew from diverse precedents, including Oceanic tribal motifs and Surrealist biomorphism, but Gottlieb synthesized them into a personal lexicon avoiding direct appropriation, prioritizing emotional resonance over cultural specificity.[32][18] By 1951, the Pictographs evolved toward looser compositions, foreshadowing Gottlieb's transition to larger-scale Imaginary Landscapes, as the rigid grids yielded to more fluid, horizon-like arrangements amid his growing emphasis on verticality and scale.[35][9]Imaginary Landscapes and Transition to Bursts
In 1951, Adolph Gottlieb initiated his Imaginary Landscapes series, marking a departure from the grid-based Pictographs by introducing spatial depth and horizon-like divisions on horizontal canvases.[9] These works typically feature abstract symbols positioned in a foreground and background, evoking primordial or elemental forces through contrasting forms and colors, such as stark blobs against expansive grounds.[2] The series, which continued until 1957, emphasized a pseudo-landscape structure without literal representation, aligning with Gottlieb's interest in evoking emotional responses akin to natural phenomena like fire or water.[35] The Imaginary Landscapes represented an intermediate phase in Gottlieb's abstraction, bridging the compartmentalized Pictographs with more open compositions by incorporating vertical and horizontal tensions via implied horizons.[28] This spatial experimentation allowed for dynamic interactions between forms, often with heavier, denser elements below lighter, ethereal ones above, suggesting gravity and atmosphere.[2] Critics noted the series' influence from surrealist notions of the subconscious, yet Gottlieb maintained that his forms derived from first-hand observation of natural contrasts rather than psychoanalytic symbolism.[9] By late 1956, Gottlieb transitioned to the Burst series, distilling the Imaginary Landscapes' dualistic structure into vertical formats dominated by a central "burst" motif—a vertical stroke or void from which radiating lines or drips emanate, flanked by two circular or ovoid forms above and below.[37] This evolution simplified space and form, eliminating horizons in favor of a more direct confrontation with emptiness and energy, as seen in early Bursts like those produced over the subsequent two years.[2] The shift reflected Gottlieb's pursuit of greater monumentality and emotional intensity, reducing symbolic clutter to focus on raw pictorial drama.[38]Evolution of the Burst Series
Gottlieb formulated the Burst motif late in 1956 as a distillation of polarities from his Imaginary Landscapes series, eliminating horizons and depth to focus on abstracted elemental forces through simplified forms on vertical canvases typically measuring 7 to 9 feet in height.[2][39] The core composition juxtaposed a static, luminous disc—often red or blue—above a volatile, gestural mass of brushwork suggesting explosion or tension, embodying contrasts like light and dark or stability and chaos.[9][38] Early Bursts from 1957, such as Blast I, debuted in Gottlieb's solo exhibition at the Martha Jackson Gallery in January 1957, featuring stark red-and-black palettes and dense, aggressive brushing to convey raw energy.[5][9] He dedicated much of 1957 and 1958 to refining this format, transitioning from horizontal landscapes to vertical orientations that amplified monumental scale and vertical thrust.[31] By 1959, examples like Crimson Spinning #2 introduced dual spherical forms within the burst motif, maintaining symbolic dualism while experimenting with color intensity for emotional depth.[39] Throughout the 1960s, the series evolved through palette variations, including cooler blues in 1962 works that softened contrasts yet preserved gestural vigor below the orb, and increased emphasis on empty space to heighten perceptual tension between forms.[2] Techniques remained rooted in broad, expressive strokes applied directly to canvas, often in oils, prioritizing raw application over preparatory drawing to capture spontaneous polarities.[40] Exhibitions during this decade, such as those highlighting 22 works tracing 1960s developments, underscored the motif's adaptability while retaining its abstract essence.[28] In the 1970s, later Bursts like a 1973 example further expanded interstitial voids between disc and underform, enhancing confrontational dynamics and scale on increasingly vast surfaces, reflecting matured restraint in composition.[2] The series extended to prints by the early 1970s, broadening its reach until Gottlieb's death on March 4, 1974, with over 200 paintings produced across nearly two decades of iterative refinement.[24][38]Personal Life and Philosophy
Marriage, Family, and Daily Practice
Adolph Gottlieb married Esther Dick on June 12, 1932, in New York City, following their meeting at a party in Greenwich Village in 1929.[1][41] The couple had no children, and Esther's career as a teacher at Fashion Industries High School offered essential financial support during periods of artistic and economic hardship in the 1930s and beyond.[4] Their partnership extended to collaborative efforts later in life, with Esther occasionally assisting in Gottlieb's studio work, including monotype production.[30] The Gottliebs relocated multiple times within New York, from apartments in Brooklyn and Manhattan to a purchased property in East Hampton in 1960, where they established a dedicated studio and enjoyed proximity to sailing opportunities, a hobby Gottlieb pursued regularly.[1] This move facilitated a more stable home life amid his intensifying career demands. Gottlieb adhered to a rigorous daily artistic practice, painting consistently in his studios across locations, including East Hampton and later Manhattan spaces adapted for accessibility after health setbacks.[1] After a 1963 heart attack, Esther aided his recovery by sourcing reference materials like postcards for sustained work.[1] Following a 1971 stroke that limited mobility but spared his right arm, he worked several hours daily with assistants' help for preparation, culminating in a focused routine of monotype creation from summer 1973 until his death, producing 54 such works with Esther's intermittent support.[30]
Views on Art, Abstraction, and Society
Gottlieb rejected the notion of pure abstraction, viewing it instead as a form of contemporary realism that captured essential human experiences beyond literal representation. In a 1943 letter co-authored with Mark Rothko to The New York Times, responding to critic Edward Alden Jewell's dismissal of their work as lacking content, they asserted that their paintings were not abstract but rooted in "man's tragic philosophy" and "basic human emotions" such as terror and defiance, drawing on mythic and primordial images rather than narrative illustration or formal decoration.[15] They emphasized that "we assert man's absolute emotions" without props or legends, positioning art as an exploration of the unknown world of imagination, accessible only through risk and direct confrontation with fundamental truths.[42] Central to Gottlieb's philosophy was the duality of human existence, which he described as "a mixture of brutality and beauty," influencing his shift to Pictographs during World War II as a primitive response to societal chaos and personal introspection.[12] He believed art should evoke emotional responses tied to these realities, stating in a 1967 oral history that "art is a way of expressing feelings and ideas that cannot be put into words," prioritizing subconscious essence over superficial aesthetics.[43] This approach extended to his later Burst series, where he sought a focal point to convey intensity, reversing earlier all-over compositions to better reflect life's confrontational aspects.[44] Regarding society, Gottlieb saw the artist as intrinsically linked to cultural currents yet unbound by didactic propaganda, critiquing Mexican muralists' efforts as ineffective since their messages could be conveyed more directly through mass media like television.[44] He advocated for artistic freedom, likening the post-1940s American shift from European influence to a "Declaration of Independence," enabling creators to challenge conventions and reflect turbulent times without pandering to public accessibility.[44] In a 1972 interview, he highlighted the persistent "gap between the artist and the public," underscoring art's role in pushing boundaries rather than bridging divides for consensus.[45] Gottlieb maintained that true abstraction served realism by distilling universal struggles, as he noted: "So-called abstraction is not abstraction at all. On the contrary, it is the realism of our times."[46]Recognition and Market Impact
Major Exhibitions and Awards
Gottlieb's works were featured in numerous solo and group exhibitions throughout his career, with significant retrospectives highlighting his evolution from pictographs to bursts. In 1952, critic Clement Greenberg organized a retrospective of his early works at the Kootz Gallery in New York, emphasizing his abstract expressionist contributions.[3] A major survey followed in 1956 at The Jewish Museum in New York, showcasing his transition to imaginal landscapes.[3] The 1968 retrospective, presented simultaneously at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the Whitney Museum of American Art, marked a pinnacle of institutional recognition during his lifetime, displaying key pieces from his burst series alongside earlier periods.[47] Internationally, Gottlieb represented the United States at the VII São Paulo Bienal in 1963, where four of his large burst paintings were exhibited, underscoring his global stature.[28] Posthumously, a comprehensive retrospective at the Peggy Guggenheim Collection in Venice in 2010–2011 featured over sixty paintings, six sculptures, and works on paper, tracing his stylistic developments.[48] Among awards, Gottlieb received third prize at the 1961 Pittsburgh International Exhibition of Contemporary Painting and Sculpture at the Carnegie Institute for his painting Tan Over Black.[5] He became the first American artist to win the Grand Premio at the VII Bienal de São Paulo in 1963 for his burst works, a honor that affirmed his leadership in abstract expressionism.[3] Additional accolades included the American Academy of Achievement award in 1965 and election to the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 1972.[49] Earlier, in the 1930s, he won first prize in the Dudensing National Competition, securing a solo exhibition at the Dudensing Gallery.[50]Auction Records and Commercial Success
Gottlieb's works from the Burst series have commanded the highest prices at auction, reflecting sustained collector demand for his abstract expressionist canvases. The artist's auction record was set by Cool Blast (1960), an oil on canvas measuring 90 by 70 inches, which sold for $6,537,000 at Christie's New York on May 13, 2008, exceeding its estimate of $2–3 million by over 118%.[51] This sale established a benchmark for Gottlieb's market, surpassing previous highs and highlighting the premium placed on his mature, large-scale compositions featuring bold, elemental forms.[52] Subsequent sales have reinforced this commercial viability, with multiple paintings achieving seven-figure results at major houses. For instance, Bonac realized $4,812,500 at Christie's, while Balance fetched $3,259,750 in the same venue.[53] At Sotheby's, Pink Smash sold for $3.3 million, and Burst II attained $2 million in May 2018.[54] These transactions, often from private collections, demonstrate consistent performance, with Gottlieb's oils typically outperforming prints and earlier pictographic works, which range from hundreds to low thousands of dollars.[55] The breadth of Gottlieb's secondary market is evident in over 1,000 auctioned lots spanning decades, maintaining an active trade despite fluctuations in the broader postwar art sector.[55] Prices for prime examples remain robust, driven by institutional recognition and the scarcity of available masterpieces, though smaller or less iconic pieces reflect wider variability.[56] This trajectory underscores Gottlieb's enduring commercial appeal within abstract expressionism, where his pictographs and bursts attract steady bidding from established buyers.[57]| Title | Execution Year | Sale Date | Price (USD) | Auction House |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cool Blast | 1960 | May 13, 2008 | 6,537,000 | Christie's |
| Bonac | Unknown | Unknown | 4,812,500 | Christie's |
| Pink Smash | Unknown | Unknown | 3,300,000 | Sotheby's |
| Balance | Unknown | Unknown | 3,259,750 | Christie's |
| Burst II | Unknown | May 2018 | 2,000,000 | Sotheby's |