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Jack Tworkov

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Jack Tworkov
Tworkov circa 1950
Born
Yakov Tworkovsky

(1900-08-15)15 August 1900
Died4 September 1982(1982-09-04)(aged 82)
NationalityAmerican
EducationNational Academy of Design,Art Students League of New York
Known forPainting
MovementAbstract expressionism

Jack Tworkov(15 August 1900 – 4 September 1982) was an Americanabstract expressionistpainter.

Early life and education[edit]

Yakov Tworkovsky,[1]was born inBiała Podlaskaon the border between Poland and theRussian Empire.His father was a tailor who immigrated to the United States in the early 1910s to set up the family tailoring business in New York City. In 1913, Tworkov, his mother, and younger sister travelled to New York through Ellis Island. Upon arriving to America, both children changed their names, Yakov became Jack, and his sister Schenehaia becameJanice Biala.Tworkov enrolled in the American public school system.

Tworkov was initially uninterested in painting and instead attendedColumbia Universityto become a writer. His sister encouraged him to attend classes at theArt Students League of New York.The League proved influential for Tworkov's art career, sparking his interest in the field art. Two of his major influences early on were paintersCézanneandMatisse.Their influence along with his sisters prompted him to study art at theNational Academy of DesignandArt Students League of New York.

Career[edit]

In 1924, he joined friendsYosl CutlerandZuni Maudto be set and costume designers forMaurice Schwartz's production ofAbraham Goldfaden'sDi Kishefmacherin.They created puppets for the show and decided to launch a puppet theatre.[2]The trio expanded their early work during a summer spent in theCatskills,at a summer home of left wing painters and writers, who offered opinions. In 1925 the trio opened the Modjacot (aportmanteauof their names) Spiel Theatre, the first Yiddish puppet theatre in America.[2]Tworkov dropped out, and the amalgam name became Modicot.

In 1929 America entered into the great depression; following the economic collapse PresidentFranklin D. Rooseveltinitiated theWork Projects Administration.Tworkov, being an aspiring artist, sought employment as a member of the Federal Art Project division of the Work Projects Administration met, which is where he met one of the first artists responsible for bringAbstract Expressionismto the attention of the American public,Willem de Kooning.This is the time in which Tworkov's art begins to take on the early signs ofAbstract Expressionismstyle. Tworkov and de Koonig met many other abstract painters, and together with a group of abstract expressionists includingArshile Gorky,Mark RothkoandJackson Pollock,founded theNew York School.Many of the people involved in creating the New York School including Tworkov were also involved with the creating of the 8th Street Club, which was responsible for hosting the9th Street Art Exhibition,which was largely regarded as the event in which the New York School style was truly exposed to the American people.

During his lifetime, Tworkov taught at several institutions, including theAmerican University,Black Mountain College,Queens College,Pratt Institute,University of Minnesota,Columbia University,andYale Universitywhere he was the chairman of the Art Department from 1963 to 1969. As chairman, Tworkov invited known artists to teach, includingAl Held,Knox Martin,George Wardlaw, andBernard Chaet.Among the students of that era wereChuck Close,Jennifer Bartlett,Richard Serra,Nancy Graves,Rackstraw Downes,andBrice Marden.In 1970, he was awarded aGuggenheim Fellowship[3]for Fine Arts.

Tworkov is regarded[by whom?]as an important and influential artist, along with Rothko, de Kooning,Philip Guston,Franz Kline,and Pollock, whose gestural paintings of the early 1950s formed the basis for the abstract expressionist movement in America. Major work from this period is characterized by the use of gestural brush strokes in flame-like color. His work transitioned during the mid-1960s. Straight lines and geometric patterns characterize his later art work.Wedding Flagsof 1965, included in theGovernor Nelson A. Rockefeller Empire State Plaza Art Collectionin Albany, NY, is a transitional painting that combines both abstract expressionism and geometric abstraction.[4]

Despite being credited as one of the founders of the New York School, Tworkov's later works of art diverged from this style of painting. After the 1950s one can see from Tworkov's art that he takes a more geometric approach to his work; this is easily identifiable by his artwork specifically Indian Red Series #2 (1979). Tworkov's experiments with geometric shapes were largely inspired by basic geometry and number systems, as well as the well knownFibonacci numbersequence.

What was formerly the UBS Art Gallery in New York exhibited five decades of Tworkov's work in the 2009 showAgainst Extremes,"a tantalizing historical survey" charting everything from his de Kooning roots to his omnipresent "dream of freedom".[5]

Tworkov died in 1982 inProvincetown, Massachusetts.He was 82.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^"Jack Tworkov | Chronology".Estate of Jack Tworkov.RetrievedOctober 16,2021.
  2. ^ab"yt/modjacot".www.museumoffamilyhistory.com.Archivedfrom the original on 2019-05-19.Retrieved2019-10-15.
  3. ^"Jack Tworkov - John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation".www.gf.org.Retrieved2024-06-03.
  4. ^"Wedding Flags, Empire State Plaza Art Collection".
  5. ^John Yau, Jack Tworkov: "Against Extremes: Five Decades of Painting",Brooklyn Rail,October 2009,[1]Archived2013-06-24 at theWayback Machine

Catalogs[edit]

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