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Al Held

Al Held

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Al Held was an influential American artist appreciated for his monumental Hard-edge paintings. In his best-known works, Held focused on abstract, geometric forms existing in a non-Euclidean space. “The best abstract painting transforms its formal qualities into metaphors for truths unavailable to direct perception,” the artist once explained. Born in Brooklyn, NY on October 12, 1928 to Polish immigrants, he spent two years serving in the US Navy before enrolling in the Art Students League of New York. Travelling to Paris on a GI scholarship, the artist attended the classes of Ossip Zadkine and befriended Ellsworth Kelly and Joan Mitchell. Returning to New York in the 1950s, his Abstract Expressionist compositions of thick, gestural marks gave way to the saturated colors and geometric forms found in his Alphabet paintings. Held enjoyed a long and successful career, which included a 20-year tenure as a faculty member of the Yale School of Art, a rich exhibition history, and numerous awards. He died on July 27, 2005 in Camerata, Italy at the age of 76. Today, his work can be found in the permanent collections of the Kunstmuseum Basel, the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C., and The Museum of Modern Art in New York, among others.

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