黑料社

Essay

Agnes Martin's Palette

Colour expert and executive director of the , , delves into Agnes Martin's palette.聽

As a colorist with a specialty in the psychology of colour, delving into artists鈥 works, especially their rationales for their colour choices, has always fascinated me. Agnes Martin鈥檚 work is particularly compelling, as her style has evolved dramatically over the years, imparting meaningful insights and clues into her choice of聽colour.

Although I did not know her personally, organising the research for this article has given me the opportunity to get a better understanding, not only of her work in colour, but a deeper glimpse into Agnes Martin as a person. Research invariably includes delving into books, catalogs, and various online resources; however, there are videotaped interviews conducted with Martin that gave me the greatest insight. Fortunately, they allowed me to both see and hear her express her own thoughts, philosophy, and emotions. What became immediately apparent is that Agnes Martin鈥檚 work is all about emotion, and one of the key components in expressing emotion is through the use of聽colour.

In her own聽words:

聽We respond to beauty with聽emotion.

Beauty speaks a message to us鈥︹︹he message is about different kinds of happiness and聽joy.

Beauty illustrates happiness:聽 the wind in the grass, the glistening waves following each other, the flight of birds, all speak of聽happiness.

Indeed, joy and happiness, along with innocence, are recurrent themes that she spoke of frequently. She related to painting as a 鈥渒ind of map鈥 to your inner responses resulting eventually with a sense of calm and that painting is a key to the 鈥渁rt within聽you.鈥

To better understand her use of colour (or any other artist鈥檚 work) it does help to look into her background and upbringing. Some of the most meaningful insights came from her long-time associate and personal friend, Arne Glimcher, the founder of the . In a videotaped interview, he spoke of her love for the water, as she was an avid swimmer and sailor in her younger years and even navigated canoes in Alaskan聽waters.

Pantone swatches Agnes Martin colour palette blue

Pantone colour swatches
漏 Pantone

This could certainly have accounted for her dedication to blue, in many variations, including the greenish teal blues of a New Mexico mountain landscape from 1947, the very light blue biomorphic shapes in her early paintings, as well as her work with the India ink washes of the 1960s. In the ensuing years, the names of some of her other works employing variations of blue are evocative of both the hue and the mood portrayed, including:聽Falling Blue, Night Sea, The Wave, and Stars, plus a number of untitled works executed in聽blue.聽

Agnes Martin Untitled 1965

Agnes Martin
Untitled 1965
Watercolour, ink and gouache on paper
漏 Estate of Agnes Martin/DACS, London, 2015

It is the latter part of her life when the 鈥渂leached out blues,鈥 as they have been called, were used so poignantly with a number of other colours, most notably with rosy pinks, peach, salmon, and the palest yellows, demonstrating the inherent balance she attained so beautifully between the warmer embracing tones and the cooler tranquil blues. It is well-known that the artist suffered from schizophrenia and the juxtaposition of these subtle colourations, including her favored blue tones, might very well have brought her a soothing sense of order and聽peace.

Arne Glimcher also revealed a very personal note about Agnes Martin in that her favorite song was Blue Skies and for anyone unfamiliar with the lyrics, the blue skies are happily 鈥渟miling at me鈥攏othing but blues skies, do I聽see.鈥

Again in her own words:聽 鈥淭he clear blue sky illustrates a different kind of happiness and soft dark night a different kind.聽 There are an infinite number of different kinds of聽happiness.鈥

At various times in her long career, she made ample use of black and white as well as variations of gray, especially within her work with geometric shapes.聽 Perhaps this was an effort in some of her pieces to paint with a 鈥渧acant mind,鈥 a deliberate attempt to exclude the possible distraction of more chromatic聽hues.

She also used warm browns, tans, and other earthy tones, as well as the golden yellow of the mesas and the desert sunlight, that spoke to her love of the New Mexican landscape, an area that she lived in during her younger years and returned to during the latter part of her聽life.

Agnes Martin Friendship 1963

Agnes Martin
Friendship 1963
incised gold leaf and gesso on canvas
Museum of Modern Art, New聽York

In her body of work, there is the interesting dichotomy of her painting painstakingly within carefully measured lines, yet using unusually soft, diaphanous, and ethereal shades that seemed to float 鈥攖he seeming contradictions of depicting a joyful, expansive feeling, yet containing her work within a rather rigid grid. This could very well be an interesting commentary on her structured Protestant upbringing as contrasted by the Zen Buddhist and Taoist philosophies that she ultimately embraced. She firmly believed that 鈥渟piritual inspiration and not intellect creates great聽work.鈥

In the words of art historian, Sister Wendy Becket: 鈥淣o one who has seriously spent time before an Agnes Martin, letting its peace communicate itself, receiving its inexplicable and ineffable happiness, has ever been disappointed. Her work awes, not just with its delicacy, but with its vigor, and this power and visual interest is something that has to be聽experienced.鈥

I heartily聽agree.

Agnes Martin is on display at 黑料社 聽until 11 October 2015.

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