Convergence (Pollock)

Convergence is a 1952 oil painting by Jackson Pollock.

Convergence
ArtistJackson Pollock
Year1952
TypeAbstract expressionism
MediumOil on canvas
Dimensions237 cm × 390 cm (93.5 in × 155 in)
LocationAlbright-Knox Art Gallery

Composition

Convergence is one of the paintings by American artist Jackson Pollock, who is known as a representative of abstract expressionism. The composition was created on canvas, measuring 93.5 inches by 155 inches. It is an oil painting, which constitutes a wide range of colors, lines and shapes, made by a method of dripping and pouring paint onto a canvas.

Reception and Analysis

These lines, spots, circles splattered on a canvas unintentionally convey the artist's emotions. The painting was made during the Cold War with Russia, and it is considered that the painting represents the idea of freedom of speech.[1][2]

Other scholars, including Yve-Alain Bois, have posited that this type of individualistic interpretation fails to account for how Pollock allowed the forces of gravity and fluidity--not his own hand--to direct the pooling and mixing of the paint.[3]

Influence

Springbok Editions made the jigsaw puzzle called Convergence in 1964 based on the Pollock's painting. The puzzle consisted of 340 pieces and it was claimed as the most difficult puzzle in the world. The puzzle gained popularity in 1965 when hundreds of thousands of Americans acquired the puzzle.[1]

See also

References

  1. "Convergence, 1952 by Jackson Pollock".
  2. "Convergence".
  3. Bois, Yve-Alain. “Whose Formalism?” The Art Bulletin 78, no. 1 (March 1996): 11–12.


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