2014.53 Frank Bowling OBE, RA, Marcia H Travels


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
Frank Bowling’s Map Paintings refer to the cartographic outlines of countries and continents that haunt a series of abstract color paintings made between 1967 and 1972. Bowling created his map works by laying the canvas directly on the floor and spreading puddles of thinned acrylic paint across the surface of the canvas (often with wooden brooms) to create lustrous, coalescing veils of color. In earlier experiments, Bowling had used shadows cast by his studio window onto the floor as a means to create abstract shapes, but when he noticed that a partic­ular shadow seemed to assume the shape of the South American continent he realized that he had happened upon a motif for his painterly investigations. Recognizing the potential of this motif as a contrast to his color experi­ments, Bowling used an overhead projector to create accurate stencil outlines of South America and his native Guyana—later followed by Africa, Australia, and Asia. Bowling employed the maps to address certain formal problems he faced as he began to explore color as its own subject. They acted succinctly as an organizational tool that could shape, hold, and anchor color to the picture surface in such a way as to ensure intensity of focus and preserve overall visual excitement. 

Excerpt from
  • Anna Katherine Brodbeck, ed., TWO X TWO X TWENTY: Two Decades Supporting Contemporary Art at the Dallas Museum of Art (Dallas: Dallas Museum of Art), 2018, 230-231.

NOTES
Did not get object file- streamlined process, no provenance. CLC, 11/30/18.  

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WEB RESOURCES 
  • Tate~Learn more about Bowling's poured paintings and his working methods. 
  • Tate~Watch Bowling discuss his transition from figuration to abstraction. 

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES

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General Description
 
Frank Bowling’s Map Paintings refer to the cartographic outlines of countries and continents that haunt a series of abstract color paintings made between 1967 and 1972. Bowling created his map works by laying the canvas directly on the floor and spreading puddles of thinned acrylic paint across the surface of the canvas (often with wooden brooms) to create lustrous, coalescing veils of color. In earlier experiments, Bowling had used shadows cast by his studio window onto the floor as a means to create abstract shapes, but when he noticed that a partic­ular shadow seemed to assume the shape of the South American continent he realized that he had happened upon a motif for his painterly investigations. Recognizing the potential of this motif as a contrast to his color experi­ments, Bowling used an overhead projector to create accurate stencil outlines of South America and his native Guyana—later followed by Africa, Australia, and Asia. Bowling employed the maps to address certain formal problems he faced as he began to explore color as its own subject. They acted succinctly as an organizational tool that could shape, hold, and anchor color to the picture surface in such a way as to ensure intensity of focus and preserve overall visual excitement. 

Excerpt from
  • Anna Katherine Brodbeck, ed., TWO X TWO X TWENTY: Two Decades Supporting Contemporary Art at the Dallas Museum of Art (Dallas: Dallas Museum of Art), 2018, 230-231.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 
  • Tate~Learn more about Bowling's poured paintings and his working methods. 
  • Tate~Watch Bowling discuss his transition from figuration to abstraction. 

Notes
Did not get object file- streamlined process, no provenance. CLC, 11/30/18.  

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

rules
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2014.53
tags
#draft
#completed
%Archived
*Contemporary Art
@Courtney
abstraction: AAT: 300056508
#routed
red (color): AAT: 300126225
color (perceived attribute): AAT: 300056130
%copyedited_Jennie
abstract (general art genre): AAT: 300417511
pouring: AAT: 300250952
Asia (continent): TGN: 1000004
monochrome: AAT: 300137660
Color-field (style): AAT: 300022120
South America (continent): TGN: 1000002
shape (form attribute): AAT: 300056273
Africa (continent): TGN: 7001242
maps (documents): AAT: 300028094
Australia (nation): TGN: 7000490
Guyana: TGN: 1000054
source file
object_notes_1_b-0248.xml.nores