Hassel Smith . Paintings 1937-1997
The Estate of Hassel Smith wishes to announce the publication of a monograph on the life work of the artist spanning seven decades, from the late 1930s to the end of the twentieth century.
No previous publication has attempted to represent the true scope of Hassel Smith’s achievement, or to locate the full range of Smith’s work within the broad historical context through which he lived. This book confirms the stature of the artist and fills a significant void in the history of innovative art in the far west of the United States.
A legendary influence within both the northern and southern West Coast milieux of the forties and fifties, Hassel Smith today is a figure paradoxically distanced by history. The monograph retrieves Hassel Smith’s unique significance and continuing relevance - reassessing the paintings, drawings, collages and assemblages of the post-war decades - proposing new interpretations of the artist’s sources and motivations, while revealing the shrouded work of more than three decades, a West Coast painter’s reclusive European journey of outstanding profundity and depth.
The publisher is Prestel Publishing (Munich London New York). The book is distributed in Europe, Britain and USA.
Petra Giloy-Hirtz is the editor of the book, Paul Karlstrom and Susan Landauer co-authors, with supporting essays by Petra Giloy-Hirtz, Robert C. Morgan, Peter Selz and Allan Temko (1975).
„...there are the West Coast legends Jay DeFeo and Hassel Smith, whose reputations have been as unstable as the Pollock drips and splatters that changed the world. (...) Hassel Smith (1915-2007) presents a bracing lesson for young artists already caught in the snares of an art world that at times has all the depth and subtlety of the red carpet on Oscars night. He was once mentioned along with abstract masters like de Kooning, Kline and Motherwell, then devolved to “West Coast underground legend,” then (kind of) vanished. But he kept working, and it’s the work that endures, as we’re reminded in this book, which examines Smith’s life and art and tries to re-establish his place in American painting. And in works like “A Rose” (1959) and “The Giant Salamander” (1961), Smith surely fits seamlessly.
From the mid-1940s to the early 1950s, Hassel Smith was one of the most influential teachers at the California School of Fine Arts (now the San Francisco Art Institute), the “center of experimental abstraction,” together with, among others, Clyfford Still and Richard Diebenkorn, and visiting professors such as Mark Rothko and Ad Reinhardt. The decade after 1945 was the decade of Abstract Expressionism in the Bay Area. In the 1960s, Hassel Smith returned with his family to England, though he would return occasionally to California, as a visiting lecturer at the University of California campuses in Berkeley, Los Angeles, and Davis and at the San Francisco Art Institute. He also had his most important solo exhibitions in California. He is represented in numerous renowned collections, such as those of the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum in New York, and Tate Gallery in London.
Thus Hassel Smith is known, and yet strangely unknown. His work was never shown in Europe, apart from a few exhibitions in England, where he died in 2007. Art critics considered him a “West Coast underground legend,” In 1964, the famous photographer John Coplans, in his essay “Re-discovering Hassel Smith” in the May issue of Artforum, lamented the neglect of this oeuvre, which he attributed to the cultural milieu of the West Coast, as opposed to New York. He wrote enthusiastically of “Hassel Smith’s early, unique and important contributions; the extreme manner, for example, in which he develops the tension at the edge of the canvas ... none of the Eastern Painters, and that goes for Gorky, de Kooning and even Kline, developed it to quite the same extent.” And, on the occasion of the Hassel Smith retrospective: Fifty-five Years of Painting, at the Sonoma County Museum in 2002, Art in America was moved to ask: “Where is the major survey this fascinating artist deserves?”
Hassel Smith’s painting is a painting of movement, full of dynamics and extraordinary energy, a painting of exuberant colors, gestural, all-over brushwork, explosive, dazzlingly vital, evoking rhythm, music, dance. It is astonishing to consider that this is an artist’s “late work,” produced in the late 1980s and early 1990s. There are also paintings with serene, more cohesive color fields, biomorphic forms, light, transparent, sometimes poetic, even mysterious, enticing from the viewer a wide variety of associations. The organic configurations seem to penetrate the painting from outside and to extend over its edge from inside into the surrounding space.
Hassel Smith had a long, creative life as an artist. He has explored the possibilities of painting: following a period figuration and geometric abstraction in the 1970s, in the mid-1980s he took up the thread of early Abstract Expressionism with great virtuosity.
Born in 1915 in Sturgis, Michigan / USA, died January 2, 2007 in England