Richard Diebenkorn

 
Art Encyclopedia:

jr Richard (Clifford) Diebenkorn

(b Portland, OR, 22 April 1922; d Berkeley, CA, 30 March 1993). American painter and printmaker. He was most widely recognized for his large-scale, luminous abstractions known as the Ocean Park paintings. His abstract and figurative work alike is devoted to the delicate balance between surface modulation and illusionistic depth, between the establishment of structure and its dissolution in light and space.

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Biography: Richard Diebenkorn

The American painter Richard Diebenkorn (1922-1993) was a member of the California school of abstract expressionism. His paintings move back and forth between representational and nonrepresentational imagery in his quest to translate his visual experience into painterly form.

Richard Clifford Diebenkorn, Jr. was born in Portland, Oregon, on April 22, 1922. Two years later his father, a sales executive, moved the family to San Francisco. Diebenkorn was particularly close to his grandmother, Florence Stephens, who supported his artistic interests and encouraged him to paint. She also stimulated his imagination with gifts of books illustrated by Howard Pyle and N. C. Wyeth.

In 1940 Diebenkorn enrolled at Stanford University. His father hoped that Stanford might lead his son to a more respectable career in medicine or law. Although Diebenkorn majored in art at Stanford, he also took courses in music, literature, and history. His teacher, Daniel Mendelowitz, took him to visit Sarah Stein's collection of the early European modernists Matisse, Picasso, and Cézanne. The early contact with Matisse's work, reinforced later by visits to the Phillips collection in Washington, D.C., and the Shchukin collection in Leningrad and Moscow, profoundly influenced Diebenkorn's artistic development.

From Realism to Abstraction

Diebenkorn's paintings of this early period are realistic in nature. Palo Alto Circle (1943) reflects his interest in Edward Hopper even as it looks forward to a more personal style. Strong shadows and the representation of a particular time and place suggest the distinctly American scene so memorialized by Hopper, while attention to flattened surface planes and a rectilinear pictorial structure reveals Diebenkorn's underlying tendency toward abstraction.

In 1943 Diebenkorn enlisted in the Marine Corps. As part of his training he attended the University of California, Berkeley, where he studied with Erle Loran, Worth Ryder, and Eugene Neuhaus. He was then assigned to the Marine base at Quantico, Virginia, near Washington, D.C. As the resident artist there he drew portraits and animated maps. Diebenkorn visited the Phillips collection several times and was particularly impressed by Matisse's The Studio, Quai St. Michel (1916). Like Matisse, Diebenkorn was interested in the re-examination of pictorial vision. He wished to explore, as the French artist had done earlier, the evocative possibilities to be found in the combination of indoor and outdoor space, in the tension between spatial illusion and surface flatness, and in the relation of figures to abstract form. Other artists who held Diebenkorn's attention at this time included Cézanne, Paul Klee, and contemporary abstract expressionists Robert Motherwell and William Baziotes.

After his discharge from the Marines in 1945, Diebenkorn attended the California School of Fine Arts in San Francisco. Here he met David Park, who became his teacher and good friend; Elmer Bischoff; Clyfford Still; and Mark Rothko. Stimulated by these contacts as well as by the work of the surrealist painters Joan Miro and Archille Gorky (whose work he saw in New York City in 1946 while living briefly in Woodstock, New York), Diebenkorn began to paint more abstractly. His canvases were filled with organic, non-representational shapes that either floated in a shallow space or were covered by a thick textured brushstroke in the manner of Clyfford Still. In 1948 Diebenkorn had his first one man show at the California Palace of the Legion of Honor in San Francisco.

Moving Toward Representational Imagery

In 1950 Diebenkorn moved to Albuquerque to obtain his Master of Fine Arts degree from the University of New Mexico. During this period his paintings took on a spaciousness and a linear organization reminiscent of the sweeping desert and sharp sunlight of his surroundings. While abstract, many of these works resemble aerial landscapes with their expansive lateral flattened forms. At the same time a quirky, meandering line entered into his work, often linking forms within a shallow surface space. It has been suggested that some of the lines and forms in these paintings can be traced to the "all-purpose" symbols found in George Herriman's Krazy Kat comic strip, also set in New Mexico.

Diebenkorn taught one semester at the University of Illinois at Urbana in 1952, and in the fall of 1953 he moved briefly to New York where he became friends with Franz Kline. The following year he returned to Berkeley. With the aid of a Rosenberg Fellowship, Diebenkorn was then able to paint full time. His paintings took on a pink tonality and a tripartite division of form. A landscape format began to emerge, overshadowing the earlier works, which had fused images of landscape, anatomy, and still life.

With his return to the Bay Area, Diebenkorn resumed close contact with Park and Bischoff. Since 1950-1951 Park had been painting a series of genre scenes, broadly modeled with a direct and forceful brushstroke. Bischoff's paintings, characterized by their atmospheric space and strong color, were also figurative in nature. By the summer of 1955 Diebenkorn began to experiment with representational imagery. At first he painted a series of table top still lifes, simply composed of a few objects placed in a flattened space with a strong color pattern.

Diebenkorn had always worked from experience, merging the impression of his immediate environment with his own feelings into an image whose allusive space and gestured surface evoked the artist's expressive intent. He continued this direction with his representational work in still life, interior scenes, city and landscapes, and compositions with one or more figures. Girl on a Terrace (1956) typifies this period of Diebenkorn's work. Here a woman stands between indoors and outdoors, her body the focal point for both composition and pictorial mood. Large planes of color executed with a loose brush stroke create a structured tension that asserts the artist's underlying abstract arrangement of form. This tension is then augmented by the figure, whose presence defines and enframes space even as it enhances the contemplative mood of the work. Diebenkorn's interiors and landscapes, with their reductive simplification of form and contradictory space, assert a similar investigation of the expressive possibilities of representational imagery.

The "Ocean Park" Series

In 1966 Diebenkorn moved to Santa Monica, California, and soon began a series of paintings that occupied his attention for the next 20 years. Entitled "Ocean Park" after an amusement park near his studio, these large format reductivist paintings returned Diebenkorn to his earlier non-objective abstraction, now combined with the lessons learned from his ten years of figurative work. In these paintings he joined broad planes of color with a superimposed linear structure. Organized on a vertical horizontal, the viewpoint is often that of looking upward or suggestive of a great distance below. Space is defined and re-defined through the relationship of line to tonal plane, a plane that is simultaneously flat and spatial due to Diebenkorn's energetic brushstroke. Warm yellows and ochres combine with azur blue to evoke the sunny atmosphere of southern California. Diebenkorn left the process of making the image visible, integrating his earlier investigations into the final painting. Through this Ocean Park series, which numbers more than 100 paintings, Diebenkorn established a dialogue between airy spatial illusion and flat surface, between spontaneity and control, between inside and outside, between rational order and evocative mood in order to represent abstractly what he called the "tension beneath the calm."

Throughout his career, Diebenkorn continued to explore the evocative potential of his visual experiences. Whether abstract or representational, his paintings unite formal concerns with a meditative and emotive mood.

Further Reading

An excellent summary of Diebenkorn's art can be found in an exhibition catalogue published by the Albright-Knox Art Gallery and Rizzoli press, Richard Diebenkorn, Paintings and Drawings, 1943-1980 (1980), with essays by Maurice Tuchman, Gerald Nordland, Robert T. Buck, and Linda Cathcart. Also recommended is a catalogue published by the Marlborough Gallery: Richard Diebenkorn - The Ocean Park Series; Recent Work, with an introduction by John Russell (London, 1973).

 

(born April 22, 1922, Portland, Ore., U.S. — died March 30, 1993, Berkeley, Calif.) U.S. painter. After studying at Stanford University, he taught at California Institute of the Arts (1947 – 50), and there developed an abstract style under the influence of such painters as Clyfford Still and Mark Rothko. By the mid 1950s he had achieved some commercial success but turned to an expressionistic figurative style. He produced accomplished figure drawings, still lifes, landscapes, and interiors in the Modernist tradition. Throughout his career he alternated between figuration and abstraction. His best-known works are the Ocean Park series, begun in the 1960s, comprising over 140 large abstract paintings that retain allusions to landscape.

For more information on Richard Diebenkorn, visit Britannica.com.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Diebenkorn, Richard,
1922–93, American painter, b. Portland, Oreg. Raised in California, he studied and taught during the 1940s at the California School of Fine Arts, where his approach to color and composition was influenced by the abstract painters Clyfford Still and Mark Rothko. He turned away from abstraction in the 1950s, developing a style that continued to use the dramatic forms and vivid colors of abstract expressionism while portraying recognizable subjects—landscapes, portraits, interiors, and still lifes. Diebenkorn and David Park, Elmer Bischoff, Joan Brown, and other Bay area artists became recognized as a California school of figurative painting. In 1967, Diebenkorn began his best-known paintings, the Ocean Park series, serenely geometric, color-saturated works in which landscape elements are only barely discernible.

Bibliography

See biography by G. Nordland (1987, repr. 1996); study by J. Livingston (1997).

 
Wikipedia: Richard Diebenkorn
Richard Diebenkorn Ocean Park No. 67, 1973, Oil on canvas, 100 x 81 in.
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Richard Diebenkorn Ocean Park No. 67, 1973, Oil on canvas, 100 x 81 in.
Richard Diebenkorn, Cityscape I,(Landscape No. 1), 1963, Oil on canvas, 60 1/4 x 50 1/2 in, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.
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Richard Diebenkorn, Cityscape I,(Landscape No. 1), 1963, Oil on canvas, 60 1/4 x 50 1/2 in, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.

Richard Clifford Diebenkorn, Jr. (April 22 1922March 30, 1993) was a well-known 20th century American painter. Diebenkorn was born in Portland, Oregon; his family moved to San Francisco, California when he was two. In 1940, Diebenkorn entered Stanford University. At first, he painted and drew in a representational style that was in a large part influenced by Edward Hopper. However, during the late 1940s and early 1950s he lived and worked in various places: New York City, Woodstock, New York, Albuquerque, New Mexico, Urbana, Illinois, Berkeley, California and he developed his own style of abstract expressionist painting. Abstract expressionism had captured worldwide attention having developed in New York during the 1940s. After the Second World War the focus of the art world shifted from the School of Paris to the New York School. In the early 1950s and Diebenkorn adopted abstract expressionism as his vehicle for self-expression, influenced at first by Clyfford Still, Arshile Gorky and Willem de Kooning. He became a leading abstract expressionist on the west coast.

He lived in Berkeley, California from 1955 to 1966. By the mid-1950s Diebenkorn had become an important figurative painter, in a style that bridged Henri Matisse with abstract expressionism. Diebenkorn, Elmer Bischoff, David Park, James Weeks, and others participated in a renaissance of figurative painting, dubbed the Bay Area Figurative Movement.

In 1965 Diebenkorn was granted a cultural visa to visit and view Henri Matisse paintings in important Soviet museums. When he returned to painting in the Bay Area in mid-1965 his resulting works summed up all that he had learned from his more than a decade as a leading figurative painter.

In 1967 Diebenkorn returned to abstraction, this time in a distinctly personal, geometric style that clearly departed from his early abstract expressionist period. The "Ocean Park" series, began in 1967 and developed for over twenty-five years, became his most famous work and resulted in more than 140 paintings. Based on the aerial landscape and perhaps the view from the window of his studio, these large-scale abstract compositions are named after a community in Santa Monica, California, where he had his studio. The Ocean Park series bridges his earlier abstract expressionist works with Color field painting and Lyrical Abstraction. He taught at this time at UCLA.

Richard Diebenkorn died due to complications from emphysema in Berkeley on March 30, 1993.

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Art Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Art. Copyright © 2002 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
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Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/  Read more
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