User:Vssloan/Perle Fine

Perle Fine (Poule Feine) (1905–1988) was an American Abstract Expressionist painter. Fine was most known by her combination of fluid and brushy rendering of the materials and her use of biomorphic forms encased and intertwined with irregular geometric shapes.

Position as a woman artist
"... [T]he very image of the Abstract Expressionist painter was a white, heterosexual male, and that this movement, which perceived itself as a glyph of individual freedom, constricted the entry of women, African Americans, and homosexuals, regardless of the nature and quality of their work." [1] While Women have had a history of being left out of the arts, it was Samuel Kootz's, a New York Gallery owner that helped determine what art was mainstream, pronouncement that there would be no women artists in his gallery.[1] To this which Fine promptly said, "I know I was as good as anybody else in there," [1] However, Perle Fine was not the only female artist that was affected by this statement, artists such as Fannie Hillsmith and Lee Krasner were also deeply affected.[3]

Despite Kootz's statement, Fine had been in many solo and group shows during the late 1940s. Because of her success with these exhibitions, there was every implication that Fine was on the verge of success in the art world.[1] "As the 1950s dawned ... there was little competition among artists either male or female, it was only when the door began to crack open that the gender of the artist began to play a more prominent role." [1] Deirdre Robson has said that "The arts were gradually thought of less in terms of being part of the 'female' realm and more as an interest suitable for a hardheaded and successful businessman."[1]

Fines’ issues as a painter was not seen as cultural criticisms that kept her on the brinks of Abstract Expressionism when it should’ve have had a place in the conversation but, it was the physical paintings themselves. She said it was always the painting rather than her being a woman and because of that, it pushed her into the artist she became. She battled with the canvas and solved problems in every piece. “Art Historian, Ann Eden Gibson says that by the early 1950s, Fine was right in the middle of Abstract Expressionism”.

With a career in abstract painting lasting over 50 years, Fine developed and stuck to high ideals and expectations of never adopting a method from another artist that could potentially compromise when work when her works of art began to become something that was not of the ordinary. She fought through barriers and limitation that any female artist would experience during the “macho milieu” of Abstract Expressionism. She kept the mindset that it was what was painted and not who painted it that mattered. With that being said, her pieces are just now being given the attention they deserved a long time ago such as an exhibition in 2016 in the Denver Art Museum, “Women of Abstract Expression” and Women of Abstract Expressionism from the 9th Street Show at the Katonah Museum of Art and Artistic License: Six Takes on the Guggenheim Collection. At the time, Fine was seen to be close with another Artist by the name of Mark Rothko. Her work also was seen to be similar to his but, Fine found her work not seeking his “sublime transcendence”.[4]

Biography
Perle Fine was born in Boston, MA, in 1905. Shortly after her parents immigrated to the United States from Russia. Her interest in art started at early age. "Starting almost immediately in grammar school at the time of the First World War ... I did posters and started winning little prizes and getting encouragement that way So that by the time I graduated from high school I knew very well I wanted to be an artist." Fine briefly went to School of Practical Art in Boston, where she learned to design newspaper advertisements, before going the New York City To briefly attend Grand Central School of Art. It was at the Grand Central School of Art where Fine met Maurice Berezov whom she married in 1930. While in New York, she also studied at the Art Students League with Kimon Nicolades. In the late 1930s she began to study with Hans Hofmann in New York City as well as in Provincetown, MA. Fine joined the American Abstract Artists in the early 1940s where she found a lot of support for her artistic ideas. "By the mid 1940s, Fine had work in the collections of Frank Lloyd Wright and Frank Crowninshield ... her art was also owned by Alfred Barr, director of the Museum of Modern Art, and Emily Hall and Burton Tremaine, the modern art collectors from Connecticut. "Perhaps one of the most and distinguishing moments in her career was a commission by Emily Tremaine to make two interpretations of [Piet] Mondrian's Victory Boogie Woogie, a painting left unfinished at his death in 1944."

In 1945, Fine had her first solo exhibit at the Willard Gallery on East 57th Street. Fine had previously run the East River Gallery that was also on East 57th Street from 1936 to 1938. It was in 1940 that Fine opened her own gallery but later, in 1946, Fine accepted an offer to work for Karl Nienrendorf whose gallery was across the street from the Willard Gallery, it was at this gallery that Fine received a subsidy so she could paint full-time.

During a show within the Nienrendorf Gallery Edward Alden Jewell, an art critic dismissed abstraction when it first came out in the 1930s calling it decorative and imitative of European avant-garde, however called Fine's pieces "aplomb" and "native resourcefulness".

In 1947, Fine was featured in an issue of The New Iconograph which showcased nonobjective art and theory. It was written that even though she was a member of American Abstract Artists, her work was different in spirit than that of Ralston Crawford and Robert Motherwell.

It was in 1950 she was nominated by Willem de Kooning and then admitted to the 8th Street "Artists' Club", located at 39 East 8th Street. "Beginning in the mid-1950s, Fine's expressionist style began to loosen. She produced thick, heavily painted abstractions using harsh, jagged strokes with a loaded brush. Her focus was the two-dimensional plane: surface, texture and medium. Fine's palette in these often large- scale pieces was one of much more somber tones."

Perle Fine was chosen by her fellow artists to show in the Ninth Street Show held on May 21 – June 10, 1951. The show was located at 60 East 9th Street on the first floor and the basement of a building which was about to be demolished. According to Bruce Altshuler:

"The artists celebrated not only the appearance of the dealers, collectors and museum people on the 9th Street, and the consequent exposure of their work, but they celebrated the creation and the strength of a living community of significant dimensions."

Perle Fine participated from 1951 to 1957 in the invitational New York Painting and Sculpture Annuals,    including the Ninth Street Show.,  She was among the 24 out of a total 256 New York School artists who was included in all the Annuals. These Annuals were important because the participants were chosen by the artists themselves. Other women artists who took part in all the shows were Elaine de Kooning, Grace Hartigan, and Joan Mitchell.

In the 1950s Fine moved to the Springs, section of East Hampton on the eastern end of Long Island where Jackson Pollock, Lee Krasner. Willem de Kooning, Conrad Marca-Relli and other members of the New York School found permanent residence.

At the 1958 exhibition her paintings offered "abstract intimations of nature ... This perception was reinforced by Fine's inclusion in "Nature in Abstraction: The Relation of Abstract Painting and sculpture to nature and twentieth century American art.

The 1960s marked her re-entry into a profoundly changed New York art scene, she encountered more galleries and new art styles. "Fine had 4 solo shows at the Graham Gallery (1961, 1963, 1964, 1967) with a major shift in her style, with a reintroduction of horizontals and verticals, announced Fine's intention to convey ... 'an emotion about color'."

Fine began to teach in 1961, as a visiting critic and lecturer at Cornell University which was when Hofstra University approached her with an offer which is where she taught privately from 1962-73.

Perle Fine stated the following:


 * " I never thought of myself as a student or teacher, but as a painter. When I paint something I am very much aware of the future. If I feel something will not stand up 40 years from now, I am not interested in doing that kind of thing."

In 1965, she developed a severe case of mononucleosis it was then that she took up making wood collages, employing curvilinear forms. Fine went on to win an award at the annual Guild Hall Artist Members' Exhibition in 1978.

"Although the last few years of her life were lost to Alzheimer's disease, she dies fulfilled in her art." Perle Fine died of pneumonia on May 31, 1988, at the age of 83 in East Hampton, New York.

For Fine "Abstract Expressionism had never been a form of open rebellion against earlier styles, but rather a beautiful, unexplored country."

=Visual Analysis=

=The Prescience Series= During the 1950s, Fine was inspired by the ideas of Hans Hoffman and the harmony and tension of combining color and shape. Fine was able to evolve using color to express means of its own. Fine started playing with act of staining and contrasting levels of translucency along with the uses reduction and positive and negative space, some may say that her works were similar to Mark Rothko and this might have been because they were close friends at the time.

=Cool Series= Her Cool Series of 1961-1663 represented a break away from the Abstract Expressionist works of her earlier years. She Stated, that the paintings were a “growth” rather than a “departure”, developing from “a need within the painting to express more.”

The Cool Series was created while Fine was living in isolation in the Springs of East Hamptons. It is said in “ The Cool Series” that during this time, artists stepped away from the soul- baring of action painting to let their images speak for themselves. (5 ) The name “Cool Series” came from her awareness that the word “cool” had come to mean a new type of art during the time. It was free from psychological self- examination that could involve jus the viewer in a direct emotional and intellectual experience. It was simply about how the viewer interacted with the color and space. Through these aspects alone, this allowed viewers a “visceral, spiritual experience.”

=Accordment Series 1969- 1980= The Accordment Series was said to be a culmination of all the modes of paintings that came before from Fine. It was named Accordment which meant an agreement or acceptance and had a defined connection with Minimalism. Kathleen Housley states in Tranquil Power, “Close in age and in temperament, Fine and Agnes Martin shared many similarities, one being that their art was routinely described by critics as “atmospheric and classic” Both Martin and Fine were artist that appeared together in a group show at the Whitney Museum in 1962 in Geometric Abstraction in America. Perle’s style is set apart by her minimalist tendencies, using colorful line work, planes of color and her distinct sweeping brushstrokes that are seen in her work.

Selected solo exhibitions

 * 1945: Marian Willard Gallery, NY;
 * 1946–47: Nierendorf Gallery, NYC;
 * 1947: M.H. de Young Memorial Museum, San Francisco, Ca;
 * 1949, 1951–53: Betty Parsons Gallery, NY;
 * 1955, 58: Tanager Gallery, NYC;
 * 1961, 63, 64, 67: Graham Gallery, NY;
 * 1972: Joan Washburn Gallery, NY;
 * 1978: "Major Works: 1954–1978: A Selection of Drawings, Paintings, and Collages," Guild Hall Museum, East Hampton, NY.

Selected group exhibitions

 * 1945: The Art of This Century, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, NYC;
 * 1946, 47, 49, 51, 52, 54, 55, 58, 61, 72: Whitney Museum of American Art, Annuals and Biennials, NY;
 * 1947-52: Painting toward architecture, (Miller Company Collection of Abstract Art), 28(+) venues in US;
 * 1950: "American Painting Today 1950," The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC;
 * 1951, 1953–57: Ninth Street Exhibition, the first and subsequent 5 "New York Painting and Sculpture Annual," Stable Gallery, NY;
 * 1951-52: "Paintings from the Miller Company Collection". Smith College Museum of Art, Northampton, MA. (December 3, 1951 - January 23, 1952);
 * 1958: "Nature in Abstraction; The Relation of Abstract Painting and Sculpture to Nature in Twentieth-Century American Art," circ., Whitney Museum of American Art, NYC;
 * 1961–62: "The Art of Assemblage," circ., Museum of Modern Art, NY;
 * 1963–64: "Hans Hofmann and His Students," circ., Museum of Modern Art, NYC;
 * 1967: "Selection 1967: Recent Acquisitions in Modern Art," University Art Museum, University of California, Berkeley;
 * 1984: "The Return of Abstraction," Ingber Gallery, NY;
 * 1990: "East Hampton Avant-Garde; A Salute to the Signa Gallery," Guild Hall Museum, East Hampton, NY;
 * 1994: "Reclaiming Artists of the New York School. Toward a More Inclusive View of the 1950s", Baruch College City University, New York City; "New York-Provincetown: A 50s Connection", Provincetown Art Association and Museum, Provincetown, Massachusetts;
 * 2004: "Reuniting an Era Abstract Expressionists of the 1950s.", Rockford Art Museum, Rockford, Illinois.
 * 2011: "Black And – -", Anita Shapolsky Gallery, New York City, NY
 * 2017: "Women in Abstract Expressionism", Palm Springs Art Museum, Palm Springs, California
 * 2019: "Sparkling Amazons: Abstract Expressionist Women of the 9th St." The Katonah Museum of Art, Westchester County, NY..
 * 2019: "Postwar Women:alumnae of the Art Students League of New York 1945-1965", Phyllis Harriman Gallery, Art Students League of NY; curated by Will Corwin.
 * 2020: "9th Street Club", Gazelli Art House, London; curated by Will Corwin.

Books

 * Anderson, Janet A. Women in the fine arts : a bibliography and illustration guide (Jefferson, N.C. : McFarland, 1991) ISBN 0-89950-541-4
 * Chiarmonte, Paula. Women artists in the United States : a selective bibliography and resource guide on the fine and decorative arts, 1750–1986 (Boston, Mass. : G.K. Hall, 1990.) ISBN 0-8161-8917-X
 * Gibson, Ann Eden Abstract expressionism : other politics (New Haven, CT : Yale University Press, 1997.) ISBN 0-300-06339-3
 * Gibson, Ann Eden. Issues in abstract expressionism : the artist-run periodicals (Ann Arbor, Mich. : UMI Research Press, 1990.) ISBN 0-8357-1944-8
 * Herskovic, Marika New York School Abstract Expressionists Artists Choice by Artists, (New York School Press, 2000.) ISBN 0-9677994-0-6. p. 16; p. 37; p. 138–141
 * Herskovic, Marika. American Abstract Expressionism of the 1950s An Illustrated Survey, (New York School Press, 2003.) ISBN 0-9677994-1-4. p. 126–129
 * Herskovic, Marika. American Abstract and Figurative Expressionism: Style Is Timely Art Is Timeless (New York School Press, 2009.) ISBN 978-0-9677994-2-1. p. 88–91
 * Housley, Kathleen L. The Tranquil Power of Perle Fine's Art (Woman's Art Journal, Spring – Summer, 2003, vol. 24, no. 1, p. 3–10
 * Housley, Kathleen L. Tranquil Power: The Art and Life of Perle Fine (New York City : Midmarch Arts Press, 2005) ISBN 1-877675-54-7
 * Rosenberg, Harold. The anxious object; art today and its audience (New York, Horizon Press [1964]
 * Rubinstein, Charlotte Streifer. American Women Artists: from early Indian times to the present (New York, N.Y. : Avon ; Boston, Mass. : G.K. Hall, 1982.) ISBN 0-380-61101-5
 * Rubinstein, Charlotte Streifer. American Women Artists: from early Indian times to the present (New York, N.Y. : Avon ; Boston, Mass. : G.K. Hall, 1982.) ISBN 0-380-61101-5