“I’m trying to stop time, or frame it.”
Joan Mitchell
Joan Mitchell
If she had not injured her knee in her teens the abstract expressionist
painter Joan Mitchell may well
have become a major competitive figure skater rather than an artist with a
major international reputation. For unlike
most post World War II American women Mitchell had the grit, the determination and
the drive to shape her world rather than be shaped by it.
As she told Bomb Magazine
“Oh, my mother was nice to me. I
mean her idea would have been your mother’s idea; why try, why go out and
compete in Junior Nationals, Senior Pairs. You know what I mean. Why don’t you
have a good time, Joanie, why don’t you just skate and have a good time? It
seemed very boring to me to do something for a good time because I didn’t know
how to have a good time.”
After spending a year painting in France on a post
graduate James Nelson Raymond Foreign
Traveling Fellowship Mitchell returned to New York in 1950 and immersed herself
in its avant-garde art scene. She frequented the Cedar Tavern, the hard
drinking watering hole favored by the abstract expressionists and became one of
the few women members of their Eighth Street Club where she adopted the nick
name, “Lady Painter.”
Begrudgingly accepted as an
equal Mitchell was included in their group exhibitions and had her first solo
New York show two years later. Mitchell frequently returned to France and at
the end of the decade moved their permanently although retaining her ties with
her homeland.
As she told the ArtNews
“I didn’t move to France permanently. I’m here by default. And now I’m too lazy to move. But I
have no attachments here, although it is very beautiful.”
As her work developed so too
did the clarity of her vision. As she explained in a 1986 Interview with Yves
Michaud “Feeling, existing, living, I think it's all the same,
except for quality. Existing is survival; it does not mean necessarily feeling.
You can say good morning, good evening. Feeling is something more: it's feeling
your existence. It's not just survival. Painting is a means of feeling
"living." . . . Painting is the only art form except still
photography which is without time. Music takes time to listen to and ends,
writing takes time and ends, movies end, ideas and even sculpture take time.
Painting does not. It never ends, it is the only thing that is both continuous
and still. Then I can be very happy. It's a still place. It's like one word,
one image....”
Austria’s Kunsthaus Bregenz
is currently showing the exhibition Joan
Mitchell Retrospective:
Her Life and Paintings until the 25th of October.
No comments:
Post a Comment