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Joseph Glasco
U.S.
1925-1996
Untitled #7, 1989
Mixed media on canvas
138 x 95 in.
Fred Jones Memorial Fund Purchase, 1990 |
Joseph Glasco was born in Pauls Valley,
Oklahoma and grew up in Texas. In 1949, after his first one-person
exhibition in New York, Glasco became the youngest artist represented
at that time in the permanent collection of The Museum of Modern
Art. Glasco's rythmical, all-over abstract compositions have often
been linked with those of American artist Jackson Pollock. During
the 1950s, Glasco became friends with Pollock; the two seemed to
share an affinity for the element of chance in their work. Glasco
first created his collaged canvases, of which Untitled #7 is one,
in the late 1970s. They were made from irregular scraps of canvas
painted and glued unevenly onto an underlying abstract painting.
According to Glasco, " . . . there is a need in me to do sculpture
and it somehow comes out when I paint and use material on top of
material, . . . which is what sculpture is about."
In this work, there is a dynamic play of contrasting warm/cool tones,
evenly dispersed with no central focus. The trails of the paintbrush
and the random shapes of color lead the eye in, out, and around
this tightly woven network. The perception of this space changes
dramatically as one experiences the work close up and, then, from
a distance.
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