“I never was interested in how to make a good painting…” — Willem de Kooning
If Jackson Pollock was the public face of the New York avant-garde, Willem de Kooning could be described as an artist’s artist, who was perceived by many of his peers as its leader. He was born in Rotterdam, where he grew up in an impoverished household and attended the Rotterdam Academy, training in fine and commercial arts. In 1926, the adventurous young artist stowed away on a ship bound for Argentina. While the ship was docked in Virginia, de Kooning slipped off, skirted immigration, and made his way to New Jersey—and so began the rest of his life. In New Jersey, de Kooning found work as a house painter. Large brushes and fluid paints were the tools of this trade, ones that he would continue to utilize throughout his artistic career. His dual foundations in drawing and craftsmanship underlay all of his work, even his most abstract paintings. De Kooning’s next stop was New York, where he forged his artistic career. The Jazz Age was in full swing when he moved to the city, and he quickly fell under the sway of the lyrical freedom of jazz and the abstract art made by other artists under its influence. New York also brought him into contact with the work of Henri Matisse and with contemporaries including John Graham and Arshile Gorky, with whom he developed a particularly close and inspiring friendship. In 1929, the Great Depression brought the Jazz Age to a crashing end. As part of President Franklin D. Roosevelt’s Works Progress Administration (WPA) program, in the 1930s de Kooning was commissioned to design public murals; he worked under Fernand Léger, who proved to be an important influence. Though his studies for the murals were never realized, they were among his first abstractions, and the experience of working on this project spurred him to pursue art making full-time. By the 1940s, de Kooning had gained prominence as an artist. Over the course of a career lasting nearly seven decades, he would work through a wide array of styles, eventually cementing himself as a crucial link from New York School painting to European modernism. Physical labor and countless revisions were constants in his work, which ranged from abstraction to figuration, often merging the two. “I never was interested in how to make a good painting…,” he once said. “I didn’t work on it with the idea of perfection, but to see how far one could go…” The female figure was an especially fertile subject for the artist. His paintings of women were among his most controversial works during his lifetime and continue to be debated today.
Karen Kedmey, independent art historian and writer, 2017
Works in Collection
82 works
21 Etchings and Poems
Pierre Alechinsky
1951–60, published 1960
A Tree in Naples
Willem de Kooning
1960
Clam Digger (Litho #3) from 9
Willem de Kooning
1967
In Memory of My Feelings
Nell Blaine
1967
In-text plate (folios 61 verso and 62 recto) from In Memo...
Willem de Kooning
1967
Joe Gould
Willem de Kooning
(n.d.)
Landing Place
Willem de Kooning
1970 (Published 1971).
Litho # 2 (Waves # 2)
Willem de Kooning
1960
Minnie Mouse
Willem de Kooning
1971
Painting
Willem de Kooning
1948
Pirate (Untitled II)
Willem de Kooning
1981
Plate (folio 59 verso) from In Memory of My Feelings
Willem de Kooning
1967
Plate (folio 64 recto) from In Memory of My Feelings
Willem de Kooning
1967
Preparatory drawing for In Memory of My Feelings
Willem de Kooning
1967
Preparatory drawing for In Memory of My Feelings
Willem de Kooning
1967
Preparatory drawing for In Memory of My Feelings
Willem de Kooning
1967
Revenge (in-text plate, folio 8) from 21 Etchings and Poems
Willem de Kooning
1960
Rider (Untitled VII)
Willem de Kooning
1985
Seated Woman
Willem de Kooning
1952
Seated Woman
Willem de Kooning
1953–54
Self-Portrait in a Convex Mirror
Richard Avedon
1984
Sting Ray
Willem de Kooning
1971
The Marshes
Willem de Kooning
1970, published 1971
Untitled
Willem de Kooning
(1968)
Exhibitions
43 exhibitionsSep 14, 1936 – Oct 12, 1936
New Horizons in American Art
283 artists · 1 curator
Dec 23, 1948 – Mar 13, 1949
American Paintings from the Museum Collection
115 artists · 1 curator
Jan 23, 1951 – Mar 25, 1951
Abstract Painting and Sculpture in America
79 artists · 1 curator
Oct 19, 1954 – Feb 06, 1955
XXVth Anniversary Exhibition: Paintings from the Museum Collection
260 artists
Oct 05, 1955 – Oct 24, 1955
Selections from the Art Lending Service
42 artists · 1 curator
Mar 14, 1957 – Apr 30, 1957
Recent American Acquisitions
46 artists · 1 curator
Apr 23, 1958 – May 18, 1958
50 Selections from the Collection of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Bareiss
41 artists · 1 curator
May 28, 1959 – Sep 08, 1959
The New American Painting as Shown in Eight European Countries 19581959
17 artists · 1 curator
Sep 30, 1959 – Nov 29, 1959
New Images of Man
23 artists · 1 curator
Oct 04, 1961 – Nov 12, 1961
The Art of Assemblage
144 artists · 1 curator
May 27, 1964
Painting and Sculpture from the Museum Collection
169 artists
Sep 15, 1964 – Oct 24, 1964
Contemporary Painters and Sculptors as Printmakers
92 artists · 1 curator
Dec 04, 1967 – Sep 10, 1968
Frank O'Hara/In Memory of My Feelings
31 artists · 2 curators
Jan 17, 1968 – Mar 04, 1968
The Sidney and Harriet Janis Collection
55 artists · 1 curator
Jan 25, 1968 – Mar 10, 1968
Word and Image: Posters and Typography from the Graphic Design Collection of the Museum of Modern Art, 18791967
197 artists · 1 curator
Feb 18, 1969 – Mar 30, 1969
Drawings: Recent Acquisitions
17 artists · 1 curator
Mar 05, 1969 – Apr 26, 1969
Willem de Kooning
1 artist
May 28, 1969 – Sep 01, 1969
Twentieth-Century Art from the Nelson Aldrich Rockefeller Collection
119 artists · 1 curator
Jun 18, 1969 – Oct 05, 1969
The New American Painting and Sculpture: The First Generation
43 artists · 2 curators
Dec 24, 1969 – Mar 01, 1970
American Drawings and Watercolors: A Selection from the Collection
40 artists · 1 curator
Nov 10, 1970 – Apr 21, 1971
The Nude: Thirty 20th-Century Drawings
24 artists · 1 curator
May 11, 1971 – Oct 19, 1971
A Selection of Drawings and Watercolors from the Museum Collection
58 artists · 1 curator
Jul 28, 1971 – Nov 01, 1971
Ways of Looking
132 artists · 1 curator
Dec 30, 1971 – Feb 28, 1972
Seven by de Kooning
1 artist
Mar 01, 1972 – May 29, 1972
Drawn in America
44 artists · 1 curator
Mar 29, 1972
Permanent Collection
45 artists · 2 curators
Mar 07, 1973 – Jun 04, 1973
Works on Paper
58 artists
Dec 03, 1974 – Mar 03, 1975
American Prints: 19131963
84 artists · 2 curators
Sep 05, 1975 – Nov 11, 1975
Drawings: Recent Gifts
15 artists · 1 curator
Jul 19, 1976 – Sep 12, 1976
Some American Drawings: Recent Acquisitions
14 artists · 1 curator
Aug 20, 1981 – Oct 06, 1981
Words and Pictures
49 artists · 1 curator
Oct 15, 1981 – Jan 03, 1982
Prints: Acquisitions 19771981
74 artists · 1 curator
Mar 01, 1982 – Mar 16, 1982
A Century of Modern Drawing, 18811981
59 artists · 1 curator
Oct 26, 1983 – Jan 03, 1984
The Modern Drawing: 100 Works on Paper from The Museum of Modern Art
81 artists · 1 curator
May 17, 1984
Selections from the Permanent Collection: Prints and Illustrated Books
99 artists · 2 curators
May 17, 1984
Selections from the Permanent Collection: Painting and Sculpture
59 artists · 2 curators
May 17, 1984
Selections from the Permanent Collection: Drawings
61 artists · 2 curators
Sep 12, 1985 – Feb 04, 1986
Tatyana Grosman Gallery Inaugural Installation
19 artists · 1 curator
Jan 24, 1987 – Jun 14, 1987
Drawings Acquisitions
65 artists · 1 curator
May 22, 1987 – Jul 26, 1987
American Prints, 19601985
25 artists · 1 curator
Nov 03, 1988 – Feb 28, 1989
Collage: Selections from the Permanent Collection
42 artists · 2 curators
Nov 17, 1988 – Mar 26, 1989
Abstractions
77 artists · 1 curator
Apr 06, 1989 – Aug 08, 1989
Master Prints from the Collection
102 artists · 1 curator