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Installations

"In every work of art, there is a balance between control and spontaneity. It is this delicate dance that creates a sense of tension and energy.”

–– John Chamberlain

Selected Works

KENNETH NOLAND  Baba Yagga, 1964

KENNETH NOLAND

Baba Yagga, 1964

Acrylic on canvas

64 1/4 x 66 1/4 inches (163.2 x 168.3 cm)

© 2025 The Kenneth Noland Foundation / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY

DAVID SMITH  Untitled, 1954

DAVID SMITH

Untitled, 1954

Black ink and tempera on paper

17 1/2 x 22 1/2 in. (44.45 x 57.15 cm)

© 2025 The Estate of David Smith / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY

JOHN CHAMBERLAIN  UNDERCOVERSRENDEZVOUS, 1999

JOHN CHAMBERLAIN

UNDERCOVERSRENDEZVOUS, 1999

Painted and stainless steel

31 x 30 x 17 inches

© 2025 John Chamberlain / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

JEAN-PAUL RIOPELLE  Le lac du Nord-Est, 1975

JEAN-PAUL RIOPELLE

Le lac du Nord-Est, 1975

Oil on canvas

78 3/4 x 118 1/8 inches (200 x 300 cm)

Press Release

Palm Beach, FL – Acquavella Galleries is pleased to present Postwar Abstraction: Movement and Form, a group exhibition exploring the breadth of abstract art in the second half of the 20th century from artists Carl Andre, John Chamberlain, Willem de Kooning, Richard Diebenkorn, Ellsworth Kelly, Kenneth Noland, Jackson Pollock, Jean Paul Riopelle, and David Smith. 

The ten featured artists pursued and pushed abstraction in new directions, resulting in their spearheading movements like Abstract Expressionism, Color Field painting, and Minimalism. When placed in dialogue with one another in this exhibition, these works show the overlap of ideas and concepts that informed the artists and these movements.

The exhibition has a particularly strong concentration of abstract sculpture, with the earliest example being David Smith’s Parrot’s Circle (1958). Constructed of welded steel, its geometric composition is rendered into a nearly two-dimensional silhouette. Smith’s use of welding and torch cutting allowed for improvisation and spontaneity outside of traditional forms of sculpture-making. The artist’s fluid approach also lends a collaged quality to his work, breaking down the rigid distinctions between sculpture, painting, and drawing. Two untitled works by Smith, a work on paper from 1954 and a painting from 1957, illustrate the ease with which he incorporated painting or drawing into his sculptures, giving them what is now considered his signature planar sensibility.

Part 1

DAVID SMITH

Parrot's Circle, 1958

Zinc coated steel

24 1/2 x 17 1/2 x 6 1/2 in. (62.2 x 44.5 x 16.5 cm)

© 2025 The Estate of David Smith / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY

Part 2

JOHN CHAMBERLAIN

CUPCAKECUTIE, 2008

Painted and stainless steel

56 x 55 x 42 inches

© 2025 John Chamberlain / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Influenced by David Smith early on in his career, Chamberlain’s interest in the convergence of painting and sculpture, and industrial materials and techniques, led to innovative works of welded steel and aluminum, often crushed, warped, and painted. Chamberlain incorporated the painterly gestures of Abstract Expressionism, represented here in the planes of color in Jackson Pollock’s Vertical Composition (c.1953–55) and Richard Diebenkorn’s Berkeley #21 (1954). One can also grasp at the sheer variety within Chamberlain’s practice, from the small-scale SIMPLYSPLENDID (1986) that is rendered in bare stainless steel to the hulking, undulating forms of CUPCAKECUTIE (2008) or the brightly colored UNDERCOVERSRENDEZVOUS (1999).

Other strains of abstraction emerged in the subsequent decades after the initial wave of Abstract Expressionism in the immediate postwar period, including Color Field painting and Minimalism. Kenneth Noland’s Baba Yagga (1964) is a classic example of the flattened and highly reduced geometric composition found in the artist’s paintings of the mid-1960s, while Ellsworth Kelly’s Yellow Panel with Red Curve (1989) goes one step further, using its shaped monochrome canvases to determine its composition and destabilize the traditional figure-ground dynamic. Carl Andre’s 49 Pieces of Steel (1967) is equally innovative in its use of materials as composition. Far removed from the energetic sculptures of Chamberlain or the rich surfaces of Pollock, the steel plate grid determines its form and shakes off the traditional qualities of sculpture, such as dimensionality, craft, or personal expression.