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Memories Arrested in Space: a centennial tribute to Jackson Pollock from the Smithsonian's Archives of American Art

Archives of American Art

Jackson Pollock (1912–1956) is an American icon. Creator of rhythmic and energetic "action painting," he is internationally hailed as a leading figure in Abstract Expressionism.

Born in Wyoming and raised in Arizona and California, he moved to New York City in 1930. Working through a variety of influences, from Regionalism and Surrealism to Native American art, Pollock arrived at a unique pictorial language that he called "direct painting," which created the visual equivalent of emotions and sensations. The technique was also a channel for positive energy and an antidote to Pollock's own internal conflicts.

Although Pollock's career was short?a mere 12 years between his first solo exhibition and his last?he decisively shaped the direction of painting after World War II. Both his art and his personality fulfilled the needs of an era that questioned traditional cultural values and hailed individual freedom of expression.

Pollock's singular history is richly documented in the Archives of American Art, principally in the papers donated by his wife, the painter Lee Krasner (1908-1984), but also in those of his eldest brother Charles (1902-1988), and of his friends and associates. This exhibition, its title taken from one of Pollock's own statements, celebrates the centenary of his birth, the magnitude of his achievement, and his enduring legacy.

Helen A. Harrison
Guest Curator


Jackson Pollock as a young boy feeding ducks

Jackson Pollock at age 10 with his dog, Gyp

Jackson Pollock

Jackson Pollock and Charles Pollock in New York

George Cox, David Alfaro Siqueiros, and Jackson Pollock in New York

Jackson Pollock reading

Jackson Pollock

Jackson Pollock at potter's wheel in the East Hampton studio of Mrs. Larry Larkin

Jackson Pollock holding a can of paint

Jackson Pollock, age 40

Copy of Jackson Pollock's birth certificate

Pollock family eating watermelon in Arizona

Stella Pollock holding a child

Jackson Pollock cutting his father's hair

Jackson Pollock hiking with his father and brothers

Jackson Pollock and Sande Pollock at the Grand Canyon

Jackson Pollock and LeRoy Pollock at the Grand Canyon

Jackson Pollock eating watermelon

Jackson Pollock hunting

Jackson Pollock in Southern California

Jackson Pollock standing on a dock

Jackson Pollock with two unidentified friends

Jackson Pollock and a group of young people

Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner

Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner marriage certificate

Thomas Hart Benton and Rita Benton letter to Jackson Pollock

David Alfaro Siqueiros letter to Jackson Pollock, Sandy Pollock, and Harold Lehman

Jackson Pollock paintings and drawings

Dr. Violet Staub de Laszlo letter to the Examining Medical Officer of the Selective Service System

Selective Service notice of classification for Jackson Pollock

Jackson Pollock postcard to Lee Krasner

Contract between Betty Parsons and Peggy Guggenheim regarding representation of Jackson Pollock

Jackson Pollock letter to Betty Parsons

Jackson Pollock letter to Reuben Kadish

Jackson Pollock letter to Louis Bunce


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