artists
CHARLES SCHUCKER
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An American abstract expressionist, color-field
painter, Schucker is known for his extensive body of “poured-paintings”
and long-running association with painter Morris Louis, the Whitney
Museum, and the Pratt Institute. His brightly hued canvases, unique
shaped paintings and psychological use of color exemplified his
personal exploration and artistic development within the Abstract
Expressionism movement.
Following temporary work in the Works Progress Administration in
Chicago, Schucker moved to New York in 1936, taught briefly at NYU
before teaching at the Pratt Institute, where he became Professor
Emeritus. A Guggenheim Fellowship in 1953 and a solo show at the
Whitney marked early success for the young artist. As a painter,
Schucker applied thinned paint with a controlled, mechanized pouring
system resulting in fields of raw canvas punctuated by bold colors.
A prodigious painter, he produced numerous large canvases, stretched,
draped, contoured, even joined. Often aligned with Helen Frankenthaler
and his friend and classmate Morris Louis, his eight Whitney Biennial
exhibitions positioned him alongside notable American artist including
Alexander Calder, Willem de Kooning, Hans Hoffman, Franz Kline,
Joan Mitchell, Georgia O’Keeffe, & Jackson Pollock. He
was in national shows that toured the Walker, San Francisco Museum
of Modern Art, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, and City Art Museum,
St. Louis. He is in the notable collections of Art Institute of
Chicago, The Whitney, The Brooklyn Museum & The Pratt Institute,
among others.
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