Milton
Avery was an abstract painter whose work is
a dialogue between line, shape and muted color.
He is considered one of the most sophisticated
20th- century artists, and although never associated
with a particular movement, influenced succeeding
generations of artists including Color Field
painters Mark Rothko and Adolph Gottlieb.
Born
in Altmar, New York, he studied art in Hartford,
Connecticut before settling in New York City
in 1925. Although much of his painting is abstract,
he never abandoned realistic images.
1944
was a watershed year for Avery, largely because
of a new gallery association with Paul Rosenberg
in New York. Rosenberg had fled to New York
from Europe with both a strong interest and
inventory of avant-garde paintings, which he
wanted to enhance. In addition to this collection,
he agreed to buy twenty-five of Avery's paintings
twice a year, which meant that Avery did not
have to worry about money and was free to create.
With
this new freedom, he became much more prolific,
and his style changed from a brushy, painterly
application and graphic detailing to denser,
more even areas of flattened color within delineated
forms.
As
his career continued, he became more and more
focused on concentrated color within simple,
broadly contoured shapes. He perfected the technique
of applying thin washes of paint to create veiled
fields of color.
In
January, 1949, he had an heart attack that left
him physically weak for the remainder of his
life, and he died in 1965, having suffered a
second heart attack three years earlier