Royal Academy of Arts, London
24 September 2016 – 2 January 2017
Guggenheim Museum, Bilbao 
3 February –4 June 2017 
In September 2016, the Royal Academy of Arts will present the first 
major exhibition of Abstract Expressionism to be held in the UK in 
almost six decades. With over 150 paintings, sculptures and photographs 
from public and private collections across the world, this ambitious 
exhibition encompasses masterpieces by the most acclaimed American 
artists associated with the movement – among them, Willem de Kooning, 
Arshile Gorky, Phillip Guston, Franz Kline, Joan Mitchell, Robert 
Motherwell, Barnett Newman, Jackson Pollock, Mark Rothko, Aaron Siskind,
 David Smith and Clyfford Still, as well as lesser-known but no less 
vital artists.
The selection aims to re-evaluate Abstract Expressionism, recognising
 that though the subject is often perceived to be unified, in reality it
 was a highly complex, fluid and many-sided phenomenon. Likewise, it 
will revise the notion of Abstract Expressionism as based solely in New 
York City by addressing such figures on the West Coast as Sam Francis, 
Mark Tobey and Minor White.
To ensure an exhibition for the 21st century, informed by new 
thinking, Abstract Expressionism will reexamine the two main strands 
into which these artists have often been grouped in the past. Namely, 
the so-called ‘colour-field’ painters, such as Rothko and Newman, versus
 the ‘gesture’ or ‘action painters’, epitomised by de Kooning and 
Pollock. The art of the former has been held to focus on the 
contemplative or sublime use of colour, whereas the latter supposedly 
demonstrated spontaneity and improvisation in their work through bold 
gestural mark-making.
Yet these categories are simplistic, belying the 
deeper concerns that linked many of the artists. For example, various 
Abstract Expressionists developed the ‘all-over composition’ by 
rejecting the formal concept of an image with a single or central focus.
 Instead, they thought in terms of energised fields, whether of vibrant 
colour or linear dynamism.
Concerns such as myth-making, the sublime, monochrome and an urge to 
stress the human presence even in abstraction also connected the 
artists. Similarly, their creations challenged conventional notions of 
scale with dimensions that ranged from minute intimacy to epic grandeur –
 dramatic innovations that the exhibition will highlight.
For the first time, the Clyfford Still Museum in Denver, which holds 
95% of the artist’s work, will loan nine major paintings to the 
exhibition, establishing the artist at the very forefront of Abstract 
Expressionism. The paintings by Clyfford Still will be presented in a 
dedicated gallery within the exhibition.
Jackson Pollock’s monumental Mural, 1943 (University of Iowa Museum 
of Art, Iowa)
and Blue Poles, 1952 (National Gallery of Australia, 
Canberra 
© The Pollock-Krasner Foundation ARS, NY and DACS, London 2016;) 
will be displayed in the same gallery for the first time, a 
juxtaposition unlikely to ever be repeated. 
Further highlights will 
include Arshile Gorky’s Water of the Flowery Mill, 1944 (The 
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York);
Willem de Kooning’s Woman II, 
1952 (The Museum of Modern Art, New York);
Franz Kline’s Vawdavitch, 
1955 (Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago
© ARS, NY and DACS, London 2016. Photo: Joe Ziolkowski);
Mark Rothko’s No. 15, 1957 
(Private Collection
 © 1998 Kate Rothko Prizel & 
Christopher Rothko ARS, NY and DACS, London.); 
Lee Krasner’s The Eye is the First Circle, 1960 
(Courtesy Robert Miller Gallery, New York 
 © ARS, NY and DACS, London 2016);
and David Smith’s Hudson 
River Landscape, 1951 (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York).
Works by artists such as Helen Frankenthaler, Adolph Gottlieb, Hans 
Hofmann, Lee Krasner and Ad Reinhardt will also feature amongst others. 
In addition to Aaron Siskind and Minor White, the photographers will 
include Harry Callahan, Herbert Matter and Barbara Morgan.
Clyfford Still, 
PH-950, 1950. Oil on canvas, 233.7 x 177.8 cm. Clyfford Still Museum, Denver © City 
and County of Denver / DACS 2016. Photo courtesy the Clyfford Still Museum, Denver, CO; 
David Smith,
Star Cage
 
1950. Painted and brushed steel, 114 x 130.2 x 65.4 cm. Lent by the Frederick R. Weisman Art Museum, University of 
Minnesota, Minneapolis. The John Rood Sculpture Collection. © Estate of David Smith/DACS, London/VAGA, New 
York 2016; 
Dr David Anfam, co-curator of Abstract Expressionism said: “Abstract 
Expressionism will explore this vast phenomenon in depth and across 
different media, revealing both its diversity and continuities as it 
constantly pushed towards extremes. It will bring together some of the 
most iconic works from around the world in a display that is unlikely to
 be repeated in our lifetime.”
Abstract Expressionism has been organised by the Royal Academy of 
Arts, London with the collaboration of the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao. The
 exhibition is curated by the independent art historian, David Anfam, 
alongside Edith Devaney, Contemporary Curator at the Royal Academy of 
Arts. Dr Anfam is the preeminent authority on Abstract Expressionism, 
the author of the catalogue raisonné of Mark Rothko’s paintings and 
Senior Consulting Curator at the Clyfford Still Museum, Denver.  
Abstract Expressionism will be accompanied by a fully illustrated 
catalogue. Authors include David Anfam, author of the now-standard 
textbook Abstract Expressionism (1990); Susan Davidson, Senior Curator, 
Collections and Exhibitions, at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New 
York; Edith Devaney, Curator of Contemporary Projects, Royal Academy of 
Arts; Jeremy Lewison, former Director of Collections at Tate; Carter 
Ratcliff author of Fate of a Gesture: Jackson Pollock and Postwar 
American Art (1996) and Christian Wurst, researcher on The Catalogue 
Raisonné of the Drawings of Jasper Johns (forthcoming).