Biography of Willem de Kooning


Willem de Kooning is an American artist born in the Netherlands.

Training in the biography of de Kooning took place at the Rotterdam Academy of Fine Arts and Techniques. Then de Kooning emigrated to the United States. As a stowaway passenger, he arrived in 1926 in America and stopped in New York. There, in 1935, he worked on the Federal Art Project.

His experiments with abstractions de Kooning began in before 1928, but continued to write in a realistic style throughout the 1930s. Then the artist headed a powerful abstract style, and in the 1940s became the leading abstract expressionist. “Woman I” with amazing rigidity brought Willem much criticism, and even partly a bad name. Later he returned to the mostly figureless pictures.

Throughout the 1960s, Willem created many images of women, as well as natural elements. And in the 1970s he wrote a dazzling series of pictorial abstractions.

Reducing the number of colors, forming eloquent brush strokes, de Kooning often used huge canvases, performed improvisations with tremendous energy. Many of his works are considered as masterpieces of abstract expressionism.

Later works in the biography of de Kooning are subjects of some disputes. More and more influence on de Kooning’s creativity was provided by Alzheimer’s disease. In a sense, the art of de Kooning survived his conscious thinking, as he continued to create beautiful, true masterpieces. In the middle of 1990, in the biography of Willem de Kooning, drawing was abandoned, and in 1997 the great artist died.


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Biography of Willem de Kooning