Roughly the size of a tall man, Abraham is a dark painting with a black zip placed off-center on a brown field. The figure-ground relationship between zip and field is ambiguous, and the work therefore reads almost as a solid slab. Newman compared the experience of viewing it to that of confronting another man head-on. Since his breakthrough with [Onement, I] (https://www.moma.org/collection/works/79601), he felt that he had thrown off the burdens of art history—including notions of compositional order and pictorial space—and forged a new beginning for painting. He saw abstraction as a language: while his paintings lacked what art historian Meyer Schapiro termed “object matter” (recognizable images), for Newman they expressed the highest metaphysical and spiritual themes, or, in Schapiro’s terms, “subject matter.” This is true of Abraham, whose title evokes both Newman’s own father and the Old Testament father who nearly sacrificed his son to God.

Additional text from

In The Studio: Postwar Abstract Painting online course, Coursera, 2017

Medium Oil on canvas
Dimensions 6' 10 3/4" x 34 1/2" (210.2 x 87.7 cm)
Credit Philip Johnson Fund
Object number 651.1959
Department Painting & Sculpture

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Barnett Newman

Barnett Newman

American, 1905–1970 61 works online

Painter and theorist Barnett Newman was one of the most intellectual artists of the New York School. He was born and raised in New York, the son of Polish Jewish immigrants.

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