Helen Frankenthaler: A Grand Sweep
The Museum of Modern Art announces an installation, Helen Frankenthaler: A Grand Sweep. Describing her painting Chairman of the Board (1971), Helen Frankenthaler said that the work was about a grand sweep and that she had the basic idea in her head, knowing how the lines would dance in and feeling sure of herself. This statement speaks to the artist’s ambition to paint on a monumental scale, and her confidence in doing so, two decades after her breakthrough moment in the Abstract Expressionist scene of midcentury New York. At the same time, the phrase—a grand sweep—also speaks to the expansive arc of her long career and its continuous innovations.
The paintings in this exhibition offer a succinct exploration of Frankenthaler’s ongoing experiments. In the 1950s, she developed a signature technique of pouring thinned oil paint on raw canvas and allowing the medium to soak into the support. By the early 1960s, she shifted to acrylic paint, enabling more defined edges and precipitating a new emphasis on shape. Attentive to the relationship between painting and landscape, she considered these forms in geographic terms, calling them districts or territories. By the late 1980s, these material investigations increasingly yielded moodily resonant compositions, like Toward Dark (1988), a recently acquired painting making its MoMA debut.











