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American
(1921–2013)
August, 1957
1966
Oil on canvas
71 x 61 in. (180.34 x 154.94 cm)
Gift of the Marie Eccles Caine Foundation
1996.67
The painting of Frank Lobdell epitomizes the strain of San Francisco abstract expressionism furthest from the New York School. Slow and deliberate rather than brash and impulsive, Lobdell’s brooding art is the very antithesis of the rapid-fire gusto of action painting. One of the many World War II veterans who attended the California School of Fine Arts, he was immediately drawn to the antidecorative assault on “good taste” exemplified by the canvases of Clyfford Still, who taught at the school from 1946 to 1950. It was Still’s “willingness to use something really raw and brutal,” another ex-GI explained, that appealed to the war-hardened veterans.
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