
JACK SHEAR
JACK SHEAR
Kelly’s accomplishments are enormous. He was among a handful of artists, emerging in the years after World War II, who defined the art of the past half-century, and with his death, that thrilling chapter of art history is, sadly, beginning to come to a close.
With expressive abstraction on the rise in the late 1940s in Europe and the United States, Kelly took a radically different path, creating works that are boldly spare, with decisive lines and solid colors—never a move wasted. Though carefully planned, they feel loose, natural, and elegantly at ease.
He looked around for ideas of what to paint and draw. “The found forms in a cathedral vault or in a plane of asphalt on a roadway seemed more valuable and instructive, an experience more sensual than geometrical painting,” he’s said. “Rather than making a picture that would be the interpretation of something I saw or the representation of an invented contents, I found an object and I presented it ‘as is.’ ”
©ELLSWORTH KELLY/COLLECTION OF THE ESTATE OF ELLSWORTH KELLY
Kelly has been seen as a successor to the hard-edged abstraction of various early-20th-century avant-garde movements, as a precursor to the Minimalists of the 1960s, or even as a dissident compatriot of the Abstract Expressionists of the 1950s, but as with so much great art, his complete body of work brushes aside categorization. “My work is about structure,” he wrote in 1969. “It has never been a reaction to Abstract Expressionism. I saw the Abstract Expressionists for the first time in 1954. My line of influence has been the ‘structure’ of things I liked: French Romanesque architecture, Byzantine, Egyptian, and Oriental art, Van Gogh, Cézanne, Monet, Klee, Picasso, Beckmann.”
©ELLSWORTH KELLY/COURTESY MUSEUM OF MODERN ART
Kelly was born in 1923 in Newburgh, New York, along the Hudson River, about 90 minutes north of the city by train. He grew up in Oradell, about 10 miles from Manhattan, at the time a fairly rural area of New Jersey. He liked bird watching as a child. “My grandmother gave me a bird book, and I got to like their colors,” Kelly told Gwyneth Paltrow in 2011. “I said, “Jesus, a little blackbird with red wings.’ That was one of the first birds I saw in the pine tree behind my house, and I followed it as he flew into one of the trees—like he was leading me on. In a way, that little bird seems to be responsible for all of my paintings.”
©ELLSWORTH KELLY/COURTESY GUGGENHEIM MUSEUM
©ELLSWORTH KELLY/COURTESY NATIONAL GALLERY OF ART
While living outside of Paris during one summer around that time, Kelly saw a film of Jacques Cousteau swimming underwater. “The whole audience went, ‘Woo, ahh,’ and I said, ‘Why don’t they do that to my paintings?’ ” he said, laughing, in a recent video interview with Andrew M. Goldstein for Artspace magazine. “I want them to faint.” Pretty soon he would regularly be offering up completely abstract paintings and works on paper—seemingly straightforward shapes radiating pure hits of color, like Orange Red Relief, made of two rectangular panels, one of each color (from 1959, it is in the collection of the Guggenheim Museum) or Spectrum V, with thirteen panels in a color array (from 1969 and owned by the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York).
©ELLSWORTH KELLY/COURTESY MOMA
As his acclaim steadily grew, he began to produce large-scale, site-specific pieces, as in the glorious 64-foot-long, 104-panel Sculpture for a Large Wall that he made for the new Transportation Building in Philadelphia (dated 1956–57, it is now held by the Museum of Modern Art in New York); Color Panels for a Large Wall, 18 panels of vivid color he designed for the Central Trust Company of Cincinnati, Ohio (1978, National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.); a big untitled work for the 1964 World’s Fair in Queens, New York; and the five gargantuan vertical Dartmouth Panels (2012) that now grace the outside of the Hood Museum at that university in Hanover, New Hampshire.
©ELLSWORTH KELLY/COURTESY UNITED STATES NATIONAL HOLOCAUST MUSEUM
Many of Kelly’s best paintings confidently but quietly exude a kind, gentle humor. They can recall the curves of elbows, knees, buttocks, flower petals. “I want my paintings in some way voluptuous, to a certain point—and certainly bodies are very voluptuous,” he’s said. Occasionally zest dashes of wit pulse through, like the two winking orange eyebrows that adorn Gold with Orange Reliefs (2013), which appeared in Kelly’s penultimate show at Marks, “At Ninety,” in 2013.
The artist’s list of major solo exhibitions is long. MoMA, the Met, the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, the NGA, Haus der Kunst in Munich, the Guggenheim, and Detroit Institute of Arts are among the institutions that have hosted shows—full-on retrospectives, as well as focused surveys of his works on paper, his prints, the metal sculptures he began making later in his career, and the tender, intimate drawings of plants that he has made throughout his career. The San Francisco Museum of Modern Art will reopen following renovations this spring with a Kelly show.
COURTESY OVERLAND PARTNERS
In the 2011 interview with Paltrow, Kelly said that he was an atheist, but that if he believed in anything it would be “Nature. What this is.”
“You’re a pantheist then,” she said.
“Yes,” he continued. “I want to paint in a way that trees grow, leaves come out—how things happen.”
“I feel this earth is enough,” Kelly said later. “It’s so fantastic. Look up at the sun. It’s millions of years old and still to be millions more. And there are all the spaces we can never see.” He told a story about how he became an atheist and continued, “Who wants heaven? I want another 10 or 15 years of being here. When you get to age 90, you have to accept it. This has been my life. It is what it was. I put everything into it that I could.”