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The cultural geographies of Abstract Expressionism: painters, critics, dealers and the production of an Atlantic art

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In this article I propose that the artistic genre of Abstract Expressionism which emerge d from New York in the late 1940s provides an illustrative example of the way a productive, trans-national geographical framework can be provided by exploring the cultural geographies of the Atlantic world. By drawing on the ways Abstract Expressionism was constructed and promoted within the rigid national perspective of 1950s' US cultural policy and reacted against in Britain and Europe on similarly nationalistic terms, I show how the circulatory exchange of cultural flows reveals a more co-produced understanding of these histories. The notion of a network of painters, dealers and critics is used to emphasize the way Abstract Expressionism was produced through a spatial framework which plays a constitutive, rather than purely connective, role. In doing so I draw particular attention to the period from the early 1950s to the 1960s and the artistic activity and critical writing associated with New York City and the Cornish coastal town of St Ives.

Keywords: Abstract Expressionism; Atlantic; Atlantique; Atlántico; Expresionismo Abstracto; Expressionnisme Abstrait; New York; Nueva York; Saint-Ives; St Ives; cultural geographies; geografías culturales; géographies culturelles

Document Type: Research Article

Affiliations: 66 Talbot Road, Northampton, Northants NNI 4JB, UK

Publication date: 01 June 2005

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