|
Jackson Pollock paintings were known for their abstract (nonfigurative) expressions. Jackson Pollock was an American painter, who created abstract method which immediately shot him to fame.
In most of the Jackson Pollock paintings, spreading color paints on the horizontal canvasses (a kind of fabric used for painting) used, to shape intangible lexis of comatose descriptions.
Jackson Pollock paintings were made on floor or on the wall so that the related paint or color can be discharged onto the canvas.
Jackson Pollock paintings were hardly made from brush strokes but instead of that paintings were influenced with brushwood's and blades. Jackson Pollock paintings are often credited with the beginning of a complete technique of canvas painting that evades every spot of stress inside the entire work of art or canvas and consequently discards the long-established thought of masterpiece in expressions of co-ordination among different components.
Some of the prominent Jackson Pollock paintings include Autumn Rhythm, Male and Female, the Moon-Woman cuts the Circle, Stenographic Figure, Blue, the She-Wolf, and Eyes in the Heat, Enchanted Forest, the key, and the tea cup, Composition with Pouring I, Shimmering Substance, Cathedral Full, fathom five, Lavender Mist, Stenographic Figure, Easter & the Totem.
Some of the earliest Jackson Pollock paintings were symbolic or semi-metaphorical brought out in black and white works and skillfully transformed in abstract style.
Jackson Pollock paintings had a tint of indigenous American paintings made up of sand and the subject matter for the paintings was taken directly from comatose mind. Critics of Jackson Pollock paintings called his paintings as Action paintings.
Jackson Pollock paintings were not the everyday paintings because Pollock did not use the usual painting techniques that include drawing board, palette and paint brush instead of that he used floor, walls, blades and dripping techniques to make his abstract paintings. |