Untitled # 55
Provenance
Private collection, NJ
Exhibitions
Byron Gallery, New York, Albert Kotin, April 7–25, 1964.
Hollis Taggart, New York, Albert Kotin: Space Interwoven, May 3–May 28, 2022.
Literature
Herskovic, Merika, Albert Kotin: American Abstract Expressionist of the 1950s (Franklin Lakes, NJ: New York School Press, 2016), ill.
Description
A core member of the New York School’s first generation of Abstract Expressionists, Albert Kotin enjoyed a prolific output in the 1950s as part of the “Downtown Group,” a circle of artists in lower Manhattan that included Franz Kline, Willem de Kooning, and Jack Tworkov. Kotin was among the group of artists selected to participate in the historic Ninth Street Show in 1951 that formally inaugurated abstract expressionism as the first American art movement to exert international influence. Credited by critic Clement Greenberg for setting a precedent of showing experimental work, the exhibition launched the careers of numerous notable abstractionists including Helen Frankenthaler, Barnett Newman, and Joan Mitchell. Given the success of the 1951 show, the tradition continued for five years, and Kotin was one of the few artists to be invited to participate in every iteration—a distinction made more meaningful as participants were chosen by fellow artists. As the artist Alexander Calder wrote in 1968, "As long as there are people such as Al Kotin, there is no danger to art."
Kotin’s early work in the 1930s incorporated Cubist techniques and included Works Progress Administration-sponsored murals. His practice became increasingly abstract in the 1940s, as the clearly defined forms in his works broke down into pure evocations of mood and color. Kotin’s work in the late 1940s demonstrate his teacher Hans Hofmann’s core tenet of planar pushing and pulling, in which a depth of field is achieved without using perspectival devices but rather through overlapping planes color. In the mid 1950s, Kotin moved away from both poured paint and thin washes of color, opting instead for expressive medium-to-large scale paintings with thick impasto covering the entire canvas to create an all-over, heavily textured surface. Often experimenting with dense tangles of marks that seem to move in an eolic fashion, he conceptualized space as “interwoven within itself” and as “a curtailed infinity moving with a force that creates an element of time and emotion.” (1) His practice connected with the predominant dialogues and arguments of the time and captured his own grappling with questions of abstraction and expressionism.
In the late 1950s, Kotin began experimenting with the size and placement of canvases, creating diptychs composed of two independently painted canvases. He also began making diminutive paintings, which at their smallest were around three by five inches, perhaps as a reaction against the prevailing grandiose scales of fellow Abstract Expressionists at the time. Kotin’s stylistic preferences shifted from heavy impasto to impressionistic, softer strokes, as seen in October, which was created in 1958 (and reworked in 1959) for a solo show at the Grand Central Moderns in 1958.
In later years, perhaps out of a tacit frustration at the limits of visual abstraction, Kotin turned to poetry, and his works from the 1960s often mobilize a symbolic use of words. Meditating on Kotin’s long career, Hofmann wrote to Kotin in 1964, "It seemed to me that over a period of 20 years since I know you as an artist, as a student, and as a friend, that the development of your work has reached a climax of great magnitude and great beauty based on a continued profound introspection and painterly development." Indeed, in the same year, a review by the New York Herald Tribune of Kotin’s solo show at Byron Gallery remarked, “Though neglected, Kotin’s statement has the unmistakable ring of truth and conviction.”
Born in 1907 in Russia, Albert Kotin immigrated to the United States in 1908. From 1929 to 1932, Kotin lived in Paris and studied at the Academié Julian, Académie de la Grande Chaumière, Atelier de Fresque, and Académie Colarossi. In 1933, Kotin was employed under the first
government art program, Public Works of Art Project (PWAP), which lasted just seven months. Like Arshile Gorky and Willem de Kooning, Kotin was assigned to the murals division. After serving in the military as a cartography instructor, he studied at the Art Students League with Hans Hofmann from 1947 to 1951. As a result of inventing a compass that could also draw ellipses, Kotin was offered a teaching position at the Polytechnic Institute of Brooklyn, where he taught from 1952 to 1961. Afterwards, he taught at Long Island University from 1966 to 1975. Kotin died in 1980.
1. Albert Kotin, Statement: It Is. New York: Magazine for Abstract Art, Second Half Publishing Co., No. 4, Autumn 1959.
Post War Inventory
- Karel Appel Birds over the Village
- Richard Artschwagger Untitled (Levi's Painting), 1981
- Ruth Lanier Asawa Untitled
- Ruth Asawa Untitled
- Pablo Atchugarry untitled #2
- Pablo Atchugarry Untitled 1
- Pablo Atchugarry Untitled 2
- Milton Avery Blue Nude
- Afro Basaldella Untitled
- William Baziotes Figures Against the Sun
- Leon Berkowitz Algonquit No 15
- Janice Biala Bullfight
- Norman Bluhm Fifth Season
- Norman Bluhm In tThe Earth
- Norman Bluhm Untitled
- Norman Bluhm Coelus II
- James Brooks Zog
- James Brooks Untitled
- Alexander Calder Construction with Stripes
- Alexander Calder Black Compass
- Alexander Calder Boomerang Night
- Alexander Calder Untitled
- Alexander Calder Narning Needles and Rattler
- Alexander Calder Butterfly and Serpent
- Alexander Calder Ciel d'Egypt, 1975
- Giorgio Cavallon Untitled
- ED Clark Moroccan Series
- Allan D'Arcangelo Proposition #8
- Allan D'Arcangelo Landscape
- Gene Davis Pinocchio
- Gene Davis Untitled
- Willeem de Kooning Woman II
- Willem DeKooning Untitled ( Woman)
- Willem DeKooning Untitled
- Jim Dine Heart in a Landscape
- Friedel Dzubas Sungod
- Friedel Dzubas Up Delta
- Friedel Dzubas Roundabout
- Sam Francis Untitled (SF62-0200
- Sam Francis Untitled (SF92-9), 1993
- Sam Francis Untitled - SF90-171,
- Sam Francis Untitled - SF89-112
- Helen Frankenthaler Untitled (Purple and Black)
- Helen Frankenthaler Summer'59 Number 1
- Helen Frankenthaler Hope Spring
- Michael Goldberg Untitled
- Michael Goldberg Untitled
- Michael Goldberg Our Delight
- Adolph Gottlieb Untitled # 30
- Al Held Primo 6
- Hans Hofmann Serenity
- Hans Hofmann Red Triangle
- Hans Hofmann On The Pier
- Hans Hofmann Untitled
- Hans Hofmann Zig Zag
- Paul Jenkins Phenomena Hokusai Fall
- Ellsworth Kelly Colored Paper Image XII (Blue Curve with Brown and Gray),
- Albert Kotin Untitled
- Albert Kotin Untitled
- Albert Kotin Untitled 1961-62
- Yayoi Kusama Chikuma River
- Alfred Leslie Number 5
- Roy Lichtenstein Reflections on Minerva
- Pat Lipsky Chinese
- Conrad Marca-Relli Passion J-L-1-18-59/89
- Conrad Marca-Relli Battle Detail
- Conrad Marca-Relli Untitled
- Conrad Marca-Relli L-3-72
- Georges Mathieu Lothaire Sort Secretment De Leon
- Mercedes Matter Tabletop Still Life
- Joan Mitchell Untitled
- Joan Mitchell Untitled
- Kyle Morris Number 13
- Kyle Morris Number 5
- Robert Motherwell In Blue Ochre with Gauloises
- Robert Motherwell Untitled
- Robert Motherwell Little A
- Robert Motherwell Summer Collage
- Robert Motherwell Sea Lion with Red Stripe
- Louise Nevelson Untitled (Moon Plant),
- Louise Nevelson Series of Unknown Cosmos XXXIX
- Louise Nevelson Untitled, 1974
- Gaston Novelli A.5
- Claes Oldenburg Punching Bag
- Jules Olitski Fi
- Richard Pettibone Harran III
- Arnoldo Pomodoro Pillars in Amaliehaven
- Larry Poons Untitled #1
- Richard Pousette-Dart Small Dark Room
- Richard Pousette-Dart Small Cathedral
- Richard Pousette-Dart Serpentine Saffron
- Milton Resnick Untitled
- Larry Rivvers Iron Maiden (Ford Fender)
- James Rosenquist Blue Light Bulb Beer Can 1/2 Eye Glass Lens
- Julian Schnabel La Hija Pequeña, la Madrastra y el Amigo Mariquita, (The Little Daughter, The Stepmother and the Friend Ladybug
- Sean Scully 9.1.96
- Turi Simeti Un Ovale Rosso
- Theodoros Stamos Field I
- Theodoros Stamos Untitled (From the High Snow, Low Sun Series)
- Theodoros Stamos Aegean Sunbox # 12
- Theodoros Stamos Classic Yellow Sun-Box
- Theodore Stamos Anemones
- Theodore Stamos Untitled
- Frank Stella The Honor and Glory of Whaling (Maquette)
- Frank Stella Nowe Miastro
- Hedda Sterne Untitled
- Elaine Sturtevant Study for Lichtenstein Figures with Sunset
- Bob Thompson The Struggle
- Esteban Vicente Luminous
- Andy Warhol Ali Fist
- Andy Warhol Flowers
- Andy Warhol Cup of Coffee
- Tom Wesselmann Maquette for Tulip and Smoking Cigarette, 1983
- Tom Wesselmann Monica Asleep on Blanket
- Michael (Corinne) West Study
- Michael West Untitled
- Michael West Study
- Michael West Red Still Life
- Michael West The Phoenix