DownloadThe Portobello Bookshop Gift Guide 2024

Helen Frankenthaler

Painting History, Writing Painting

Alison Rowley author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:13th Jun '24

£28.99

Supplier delay - available to order, but may not be available until after 16th October 2025.

Helen Frankenthaler cover

This book offers original insights into the practice of colour field painter Helen Frankenthaler, one of the greatest American artists of the 20th century.

This ground-breaking and extraordinary examination of the work of Abstract Expressionist painter Helen Frankenthaler overturns assumptions about the artist, whose work has been burdened by its label as ‘the bridge between Pollock and what was possible’. Trained as a painter, Alison Rowley brings a keen eye to Frankenthaler’s paintings, returning to the fore the artist’s debt not only to Jackson Pollock but also to Cezanne, and speculating for the first time as to her artistic responses to wider political events, in particular the Rosenberg trial. Making a fascinating case, too, for the connections between the ‘breakthrough’ work Mountains and Sea and Lily Briscoe’s painting in Virginia Woolf’s novel To the Lighthouse, this beautifully written book provides crucial insights into Frankenthaler’s practice. With her bold and radical painting now appearing in major international exhibitions, this paperback re-issue of Rowley’s original 2007 study comes at a significant moment of reappraisal, and confirms Frankenthaler’s status as one of the most important artists of her generation.

By offering a profound re-viewing and perceptive contextualisation of two of Helen Frankenthaler’s seminal paintings from the 1950s: Mountain and Sea and Eden, Alison Rowley expands feminist scholarship and challenges the established canon of modernist art history. Grounded in the author’s deep intellectual curiosity and her intimate comprehension of the creative process, the production of knowledge and the formation of subjectivity, the book stimulates new and nuanced insights into the practice and life of one of the major American postwar painters. This re-engagement with Frankenthaler’s work is critical reading for anyone interested in the writing of art history. * Kerstin Mey, Professor of Visual Culture, University of Limerick, Ireland *
Working with a painter’s visual acuity and imagination, Alison Rowley makes links across chronologies, art forms, and continents, which she then explores in forensic detail and lucid language. This book demonstrates why Helen Frankenthaler’s work both demands close attention from a feminist standpoint, and why the discipline of Art History alone is insufficient for it. * Hilary Robinson, Professor of Feminism, Art, and Theory, Loughborough University, UK *

ISBN: 9781350297036

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

184 pages