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History

American Abstract Artists (AAA) was founded as an exhibiting organization in 1936 to unite multi-generational American artists working abstractly. Since its inception, AAA has played a pivotal role in the evolution of non-objective art in America. The group was born in response to the lack of professional respect accorded American modernists in the 1930s. AAA's annual exhibition was the focus for the energies of the emerging American avant-garde.

 

Past Members
Past members of AAA over the years have included:

 

A
Mildred Aissen
Josef Albers *founder
Calvin Albert
Lewin Alcopley
Jean Arp

B
Frank Bacher
Benjamin Baldwin
Herbert Bayer
Rosalind Bengelsdorf *founder
Ward Bennett
Maurice Berezov
Nell Blaine
Barbara Blair
Mel Bochner
Leslie Bohnenkamp
Ilya Bolotowsky *founder & past president
Henry Botkin *past president
Louise Bourgeois
Harry Bowden *founder
James Bowness
Theodore Brenson
James Brooks
Byron Browne *founder
Fritz Bultman
Sidney Butchkes

C
Sarah Canright
Rhys Caparn
Jeanne Carles
Georgio Cavallon *founder
A. N. Christie *founder
Eve Clendenin
Anna Cohen
Arthur Cohen
Jean Cohen
William Conlon
Robert Conover
Alexander Corazzo
Ed Corbett
Doris Cross
Charlotte Cushman

D
Nassos Daphnis
Eleanor De Laittre
Jose De Riverera
David Diao
Burgoyne Diller *founder
Blanche Dombek
Werner Drewes *founder

E
Herzl Emanuel *founder
Nancy Einreinhofer

F
Claire Falkenstein
Lyonel Feininger
John Ferren
Perle Fine
Herbert Ferber
Katherine Ferguson
Ida Fischer
Adolf R. Fleischmann
Robert Foster
William Freed
Susie Frelinghuysen *founder
William Freud
Tibor Freund

G
A. E. Gallatin *founder
Sydney Geist
Helen Gilbert
Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe
Sam Gilliam
Fritz Glarner *founder
Maurice Golubov
Ron Gorchov
Sidney Gordin
Wilfred Graf Schwerin von Krosigk
Durnel Grant
Clement Greenberg
Balcomb Greene *founder & past president
Gertrude Greene *founder
John Grillo
Peter Grippe
Jose Guerrero
Luke Gwilliam

H
Marcia Hafif
Vanessa Haney
Gaylen C. Hansen
Hananiah Harari *founder
Christian Haub
Nancy Haynes
Jean Helion
Emanuel Herzel
Jene Highstein
Clinton Hill
Fannie Hillsmith
Stuart Holden
Carl Holty *founder & past president
Harry Holtzman *founder
Beate Hulbeck
Robert Huot

I
Angelo Ippolito
Ralph Iwamoto

J
Ward Jackson
Raymond Johnson
Dorothy Joralemon

K
Ray Kaiser (later Eames) *founder
Jerry Kajetanski
Herbert Kallem
Jerome Kamrowski
Frederick Kann
Nikolai Kasak
Weldon Kees
Paul Kelpe *founder
Marie Kennedy *founder
Gyorgy Kepes
Weldon Kess
Alan Kleiman
Karl Knaths
Joseph Konzal
Lee Krasner
Harold Krisel
Wilfred Krosigk

L
Leroy Lamis
Leo Lances
Ibram Lassaw *founder &
past president
(1946-49)
Fernand Leger
Irving Lehman
Howard Lester
Israel Levitan
Norman Lewis
Sol Lewitt
Richard Lippold
Seymour Lipton
John Little
Michael Loew
Al Loving
Agnes Lyall *founder

M
Leo Manso
Brice Marden
Alice Trumbull Mason *founder
Mercedes Matter *founder
Robert McFarland
George McNeil *founder
Clement Meadmore
Joseph Meert
Joseph Meierhans
Lily Michael
Jeanne Miles
Brenda Miller
Laszlo Moholy-Nagy
Piet Mondrian
Robert Montoya
George L. K. Morris *founder
Jill Moser

N
Louise Nevelson
Ben Nicholson

O
John Opper *founder
Alfonso Ossorio

P
Stephen Pace
Betty Parsons
Henry C. Pearson
George Peck
Irene Rice Pereira
Margaret Peterson
Edgar Pillet
Peter Pinchbeck
Howardena Pindell
Easton Pribble

Q
Harvey Quaytman

R
Ad Reinhardt
Hans Richter
George Rickey
Beatrice Riese *past president
(Kaplan) Rivkah
Raymond Rocklyn
Gabriel Roos
Ralph R. Rosenborg *founder
Robert Roster
Judith Rothschild *past president
Antonio Rubino
Judith Rubino
Robert Ryman

S
Doug Sanderson
Salvatore Scarpitta
Louis Schanker *founder
Abram Schlemowitz
Edith Schloss
John Sennhauser
Zahara Shatz
Charles G. Shaw *founder
Jean Sherman
Oli Sihvonen
Esphyr Slobodkina *founder &
past president

David Smith *founder
George Smith
Robert Smithson
Hyde Solomon
Helen Soreff
Max Spivak
Clay Spohn
Julian Stanczak
Jason Stewart
James Stewart
Knute Stiles
Racelle Strick
George Sugarman
Florence Swift
Albert Swinden *founder

T
Susanna Tanger
Henry Tedlie
Horatio Torres
Serge Truback
R. D. Turnbull
Richard Tuttle
Jack Tworkov

V
Ruth Vollmer
John von Wicht
Charmion von Wiegand *past president
Vaclav Vytlacil *founder

U
Vivienne Thaul Wechter
Sybil Weil
Rudolph Weisenborn
Warren Wheelock
Frederick J. Whiteman *founder
Harry Wildenburg
Neil Williams
Robert J. Wolff

X
Jean Xceron

Y
James Yohe

Z
W. M. (Wilfred) Zogbaum *founder

 

The Influence of Hans Hofmann
Although never a member of AAA, it should be noted that artist Hans Hofmann had an ongoing influence on many original founding and later members of the group:

* Original founding members of AAA who studied with Hofmann include Rosalind Bengelsdorf, Harry Bowden, Georgio Cavallon, Burgoyne Diller, Carl Holty, Ray Kaiser (later Ray Eames), Mercedes Matter, George McNeil, and Vaclav Vytlacil.

* Later AAA members who studied with Hofmann include Maurice Berezov, Nell Blaine, Fritz Bultman, Perle Fine, Robert Goodnough, Lee Krasner, Louise Nevelson, Judith Rothschild, and Ward Jackson.

* Hofmann also addressed AAA's annual meeting at the Riverside Museum in 1941.

 

The Abstract Tradition, by Stephen Westfall
The following essay was published as an introduction to AAA's
60th Anniversary Print Portfolio, 1997.

During the sixty-one years of the existence of the American Abstract Artists group, abstract art has evolved from a foray into largely unexplored imaginary territory into a mainstream modal of aesthetic practice. It seems inevitable that what started out as a mission to foster a sense of community among abstract artists by promoting and providing occasions to exhibit their work and offering a discursive forum for an exchange of views, would now find itself a valuable repository of the history of the abstract movement in America. If professional organizations by their nature tend toward parochialism, the AAA owes its longevity in part to the relative absence of a party line. The will to abstraction, after all, is generated by a variety of private impulses and historical interpretations.

In its early years, the AAA was a refuge and source of strength for adventurous artists faced with a largely uncomprehending and often hostile art public. Abstraction broke in America at the Armory Show in 1913, though Dove, Hartley, and O'Keefe had made forays into abstraction even earlier. Considering the greater difficulties of travel and relative absence of photographic reproduction it is marvelous how advanced the first American work was in relationship to the acknowledged historical primacy of the European abstract painters. And to consider the work of pioneering Americans is to be reminded again of how deeply they were influenced by the Symbolist movement in art and literature. One sees this influence in their emphasis on the natural landscape as source imagery and their attempts to suggest a corollary between the external, natural world the interior world of imagination and psychology.

The American Abstract Artists group wasn't formed until more than twenty years later, in 1936, out of a support network led by Carl Holty, Harry Holtzman, and George L. K. Morris, among others. By this time, abstract art in the public imagination had come to be equated with the clean lines and aesthetic pragmatism of the machine-age. A dynamic, geometric clarity was certainly the aesthetic goal of many abstract artists, but there were others who worked under the influence of Surrealism and Expressionism, not to mention the natural landscape that so inspired the first generation of American abstract artists. From its beginnings, the AAA sought to accommodate this diversity, whatever the opinions of its individual members.

One manifestation of this tolerance of diversity was the welcome extended to the European artists fleeing the events of World War II. Mondrian, Leger, and Moholy-Nagy were only among the best known arrivals who found fellowship and an exchange of ideas within the AAA. It is important to remember that, while some programs of abstraction were imagined as a universal language of form, the broader artistic climate in America up to and during the war was marked by sentimental and nationalistic clamor for representations of "local scene," national history and folklore. The international appeal and community of abstract art was regarded with grave, sometimes hysterical suspicion.

The politics of expanded and diversified identity consumes our contemporary art discourse with much of the same sense of urgency. A measure of urgency is, in fact, widely held to be one of the criteria of recognition for contemporary art. The contemplative claim of most abstract art is felt by many to have lost its address. There is also a residual, but still powerful resentment over the dominance of monumental abstractionist styles both critically and in the marketplace during the late fifties and sixties. Against this dynamic and contentious backdrop the AAA has typically gone about its business in low key fashion. It continues to provide a wide tent for its members, to provide forums for exhibitions and discussion, but it also now finds itself in an emergent, wholly natural role as conservator due to both its own longevity and the ebb and flow of critical acceptance.

The print portfolio at hand is in part a testament to that longevity. It is the third the organization has sponsored in sixty years. The first was published in 1937, and the second fifty years later. For the 1987 50th Anniversary Portfolio two of the original participants Ibram Lassaw and Esphyr Slobodinka, each contributed a new lithograph. Many more from the 1987 portfolio are represented this time around, along with several new names. As the new portfolio demonstrates, the AAA continues to abjure any party line about what abstraction should be or look like. Of course, the geometric is strongly represented, but gestural and organically derived imagery is also present. Some of the work is diagrammatic, reflecting imaginations that express themselves more fully in three dimensions. And the visualizing inscription of the computer is increasingly in evidence. Apart from the pleasures afforded by the individual prints the portfolio serves as an index of the plurality of styles and intention embraced by abstract art.

The art world is much larger than it was when the AAA was founded. The proliferation and hybridization of abstractionist styles has clearly been accommodated and encouraged by the group. If abstraction has been so thoroughly integrated into contemporary art practice that it is often considered a mode to work against, then the subtle shift of balance in the AAA's stewardship from advocacy to conservatorship will provide the careers it nourishes and discourse it foster a reminder of the deepening connectedness that comes from being a part of a living tradition.

 

 
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