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Abstractions

Collection Info
Installation view of Expanding Narratives: The Figure and The Ground at the Smart Museum of Art…

Abstract art is art that does not mimic visual reality. Using shapes, hues, gestures, materials—and even light—artists depart from depicting what is around them to render impressions, geometries, emotions, and sensations. The Smart’s collection possesses historical strengths in early examples of abstraction by artists such as Helen Saunders, as well as icons of the mid-century New York art scene like Mark Rothko and Joan Mitchell. Importantly, the collection includes substantial abstract paintings by African American artists (such as Norman Lewis and Sam Gilliam) and Asian artists (such as Lee Ufan and Kishio Suga).

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Glass Abstraction
Ernő Berda
1929
Abstract Composition
Florence Henri
1934/1975
Bending Experiment in Plexiglass
László Moholy-Nagy
June 30, 1941
Untitled
Evelyn Statsinger
1954
Human Form
Barbara Crane
1966
Jalapa (Mexico) 46
Aaron Siskind
1974
Peru 229
Aaron Siskind
1977