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Pearlstein/Held

Five Decades

November 19, 2009 - February 13, 2010

Philip Pearlstein, THE CAPTURE, 1954

Philip Pearlstein

THE CAPTURE, 1954

Oil on canvas

48 x 40 inches

121.92 x 101.6 cm

PP12927

Al Held, ECHO, 1966

Al Held

ECHO, 1966

Acrylic on canvas

84 x 72 inches

213.36 x 182.88 cm

AH12930

Philip Pearlstein, FEMALE NUDE ON YELLOW DRAPE, 1965

Philip Pearlstein

FEMALE NUDE ON YELLOW DRAPE, 1965

Oil on canvas

53 3/4 x 72 inches

136.53 x 182.88 cm

PP12573

Al Held, NORTHWEST, 1973

Al Held

NORTHWEST, 1973

Acrylic on canvas

114 x 168 inches

289.56 x 426.72 cm

AH12931

Philip Pearlstein, AL HELD AND SYLVIA STONE, 1968

Philip Pearlstein

AL HELD AND SYLVIA STONE, 1968

Oil on Canvas

66 x 72 inches

167.64 x 182.88 cm

PP12928

 

Private Collection, New York

Al Held, ROBERTA'S TRIP II, 1986

Al Held

ROBERTA'S TRIP II, 1986

Acrylic on canvas

108 x 216 inches

274.32 x 548.64 cm

AH12932

Press Release

PEARLSTEIN/HELD: Five Decades

 

November 19, 2009 – February 13, 2010

 

Opening reception: Thursday, November 19, 6 – 8pm

Gallery hours: Tuesday – Saturday: 10am – 6pm

New York, NY – October 16, 2009 – On November 19th, Betty Cuningham Gallery will open the two person show: PEARLSTEIN/HELDFive Decades.  The exhibition compares the work of painters Philip Pearlstein and Al Held, both of whom have parallel careers spanning the last fifty years.  The show will remain on view until February 13, 2010, at the gallery’s space located at 541 W. 25th Street, between 10th and 11th Avenues.

Both artists were born in the mid – 1920’s: Pearlstein in 1924 and Held in 1928.  The artists arrived in the center of the “art scene” in the late 1940’s at the time of the birth of Abstract Expressionism.  Both tried their hand in Abstract Expressionism in the 1950’s, but by 1960, both had left Abstract Expressionism behind.  Philip Pearlstein chose the route of representation – particularly of the female nude, a classic subject throughout art history.  Al Held moved toward clear abstraction.  Both shared the position that “Expressionism” would be dropped from their paintings.  By the late 1960’s Pearlstein had committed to the “New Realism”, as stated in John Perrault’s manifesto:

No stories; no allegories; no symbols. 

No hidden meanings; no obvious meanings.

No philosophy, religion, or psychology.

No jokes.

No political content.

No illustration.

No fantasy or imagination; no dreams; no poetry.

At the same time Held removed any evidence of his hand from the canvas, showing no obvious brushwork, and removed the color, producing his well recognized black and white paintings.  Held in fact was to anticipate the Minimal Manifesto of Donald Judd as it appeared in Time magazine in May of 1971:

No movement, no gesture, no direction. 

No Mass (only gleaming metal surfaces and transparencies of color Perspex). 

No pedestal: the box on the floor in the sculpture.

No metaphor, no image, and especially

No relation or reference to the human figure.

At the same time Held removed any evidence of his hand from the canvas, showing no obvious brushwork, and removed the color, producing his well recognized black and white paintings.  Held in fact was to anticipate the Minimal Manifesto of Donald Judd as it appeared in Time magazine in May of 1971:

No movement, no gesture, no direction. 

No Mass (only gleaming metal surfaces and transparencies of color Perspex). 

No pedestal: the box on the floor in the sculpture.

No metaphor, no image, and especially

No relation or reference to the human figure.

From the late 1970’s on, both painters, following their independent roads, chose to further challenge themselves by increasing the complexity to their compositions and their color. 

Up to the time of his death in 2005, Held remained steadfastly committed to abstraction, and actually took abstraction a step further by removing his hand and allowing his paintings to be completed by assistants.  His complex paintings based on linear perspective would be created on a working canvas, a canvas never to be shown, but to be executed perfectly on a fresh canvas. 

On the other hand, Pearlstein, the committed figurative artist, in his most recent work, jams figures and objects into his canvases to make a complex and tight abstract composition.  In effect, Held’s late canvases were oddly representative of a new world and Pearlstein’s oversized nudes were clearly abstractions with elements of recognition.

The exhibition seeks to show the distinctive routes of Pearlstein and of Held.  The two paths, which appeared at first to be antithetical one to the other, almost seem today to merge as one in contemporary eyes.

Irving Sandler, who has written extensively on Al Held and on Philip Pearlstein, will be contributing an essay to this exhibition.

Click below for full press release.