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Willem de Kooning, Woman, I, 1950-1952 Expressive theory of the art was formulated out of Romantic Movement. As per the theory, art was indeed seen as the means of portraying the unique, individual emotions and feelings of the artist and that good art should be capable of successfully communicating the emotions and feelings that are intended to be expressed by the artist. The painting is a ballad of the sexual frustration (Mark and Annalyn 37). In case one visualizes the relationship Kooning has with the woman, it would be pictured as making polite conversation or being ignored while sitting around her on the subway, while desire is pounding his brain.
This is a comic painting that is in contrast with the late Pollock or the tragic vision of the Rothko, it would miss a point if seen as being figurative. Nonetheless, it creates new areas of erotic everyday life to the abstract art. The painting is an abstract that does not exists; it is the woman that only exists on the mind of the painter (Mark and Annalyn 42). Moreover, the fabulation of brushwork and color, with the pushed, splattered, realized paint telling unequivocally that which is furiously sexual.
Regardless of the fierce heterosexuality that exists in the painting of Woman I, the artists who have followed de Kooning into the new space between real world and abstraction dealt in the sexual ambiguity. Indeed, closer to the de Kooning’s cartoon painting are the Oldenburg’s fantasies of the mass produced consumables sexualized and inflated. Indeed, the exaggerations made on the woman including the giant lipstick are simply a portrayal of the emotional and romantic state of the painter’s mind (Mark and Annalyn 51).
In a nutshell, the painting is an abstract that only portrays the emotional state of mind of the painter. It shows that woman the painter fantasizes off during the painting period. It is therefore not a real life painting but rather an abstract.Work CitedMark Stevens and Annalyn Swan, "de Kooning: An American Master", 2004, Knopf, Borzoi Books. Print.
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