
by Jackson Pollock, 1948
Jackson Pollock produced this Summertime: Number 9A in 1948, one of his first monumental drip paintings. The elongated canvas (over 5.5 meters wide) unfurls like a frieze. Black and tan skeins of paint dance across the creamy beige background.
The title suggests seasonal exuberance and rhythm. Pollock worked on the floor, moving around the canvas, dripping and flinging paint from sticks and hardened brushes. He called this "action painting." The continuous horizontal format anticipates later "all-over" compositions. It hangs at Tate Modern.

George Frederick Watts
Tate Modern, London, London

Joseph Beuys, 1985
Tate Modern, London, London

Salvador Dalí, 1936
Tate Modern, London, London

William Blake
Tate Modern, London, London
Other masterpieces from the Abstract Expressionism movement

Piet Mondrian, 1930
Kunsthaus Zürich, Zurich

Wassily Kandinsky, 1923
Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York

Piet Mondrian
Noordbrabants Museum, 's-Hertogenbosch, 's-Hertogenbosch

Piet Mondrian, 1937
Tate Modern, London, London

Piet Mondrian
Private Collection, Unknown

Piet Mondrian
Private Collection, Unknown

Piet Mondrian
Private Collection, Unknown

Piet Mondrian
Gemeentemuseum den Haag, Hague, The Hague
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