Signs & Symbols
Audio Guide Playlist
This audio guide highlights selected works from the exhibition Signs & Symbols, focusing on the development of American abstraction after World War II.
NARRATOR: In 1948, Adolph Gottlieb painted this dark, enigmatic canvas dominated by images of eyes. Titled Vigil, the painting belongs to a body of work the artist called Pictographs. Like many other artists of the postwar period, Gottlieb preferred to work in a semi-abstract mode. In his painting, he attempted to tap into the world of the subconscious by using images and symbols open to multiple interpretations.
Notice how this canvas is divided into rectangular sections. Look at the one second from the left. An archaic face appears at the top, with the suggestion of a body and feet at the bottom. Now look at the panel on the far right. Notice the thick line that circles down from the top. It suggests a river, a path, or even a snake. Gottlieb found inspiration in African tribal and Native American art. Primitive art, he said, was in touch with the subconscious.
In a 1960s radio program, the artist described his Pictographs:
ADOLPH GOTTLIEB: (Archival audio from Pacifica Archives) I would start by having an arbitrary division of the canvas into rough rectangular areas, and with the process of free association I would put various images and symbols within these compartments. And it was irrational; there was no logical or rational design in the placing of these. It was purely following an impulse, trying to use the method of free association. And then when all of these images and symbols were combined, they could not be read like a rebus. There was no direct connection from one to the other. However, by the strange juxtapositions that occurred, a new kind of significance stemmed from this juxtaposition.
. . . My favorite symbols were those which I didn’t understand. If I knew too well what the symbol signified, then I would eliminate it because then it got to be boring. I wanted these symbols to have. . . a certain kind of ambiguity and mystery.
- 200 Introduction to Signs & Symbols
- 201 Louise Bourgeois, One and Others, 1955
- 202 Mark Tobey, Universal Field, 1949
- 203 Will Barnet, Male and Female, 1954
- 204 Steve Wheeler, Laughing Boy Rolling, 1946
- 205 Forrest Bess, Drawings, 1957
- 206 Mark Rothko, Agitation of the Archaic, 1944
- 207 Adolph Gottlieb, Vigil, 1948
- 208 Aaron Siskind
- 210 Jackson Pollock, Untitled, c. 1939–42
- 211 Richard Pousette-Dart, The Magnificent, 1950–51
- 212 Isamu Noguchi, The Gunas, 1946
- 213 Alfred Jensen, A Perfect Equal Area I, 1960
- 214 Jasper Johns, White Target, 1957
- 509 Alexander Calder, The Brass Family, 1929