Helen Frankenthaler (above), an abstract expressionist painter known for pouring pigments directly onto the canvas, died on Tuesday at her home in Darien, Connecticut. She was 83. – AP Photo

NEW YORK: Helen Frankenthaler, an abstract expressionist painter known for pouring pigments directly onto the canvas, died Tuesday at her home in Darien, Connecticut. She was 83.

In announcing her death with “profound sadness,” Frankenthaler's family said she died after a long illness, but declined to provide further details.

Frankenthaler, whose career spanned six decades, was an eminent painter among the second generation of postwar abstract American artists who played a key role in the transition from abstract expressionism to Colour Field painting.

Artists like Mark Rothko and Clifford Still later became known as the foremost Colour Field painters.

Frankenthaler was inspired by Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning, and later influenced such colourists as Kenneth Noland and Morris Louis.

Key to the development of the Colour Field movement was the “soak stain” technique Frankenthaler first expressed in “Mountains and Sea” (1952), whose colour washes and unfinished look struck a balance between painting and drawing similar to watercolours.

One of her best known works, it is currently on loan at the National Gallery of Art in Washington.

Born in New York City on December 12, 1928, to New York State Supreme Court judge Alfred Frankenthaler and German immigrant Martha Lowenstein, Frankenthaler's talent was recognised early on by renowned art critic Clement Greenberg, who helped propel her career.

She was the recipient of 26 honourary doctorates and numerous honours and awards, receiving the National Medal of the Arts in 2001.

Although she is best known as a painter, Frankenthaler also made notable forays in lithographs, etchings and screen prints, making a significant mark on printmaking. She even dabbled briefly into sculpture, though with far less success.

In 1958, Frankenthaler married Robert Motherwell, a preeminent figure among the first generation of postwar American abstract expressionists. Known as “the golden couple” for the lavish parties they threw in New York, the pair divorced in 1971.

Frankenthaler is survived by her husband Stephen DuBrul, an investment banker she married in 1994, as well as two stepdaughters – Jeannie and Lise Motherwell – and nieces and nephews. Her older sisters Gloria Ross Bookman and Marjorie Iseman died before the artist.

Opinion

Editorial

Falling temperatures
Updated 04 Jan, 2025

Falling temperatures

Vitally important for stakeholders to acknowledge, understand politicians can still challenge opposing parties’ narratives without also being in a constant state of war with each other.
Agriculture census
04 Jan, 2025

Agriculture census

ACCURATE information relating to agricultural activities is vital for data-driven future planning, policymaking, as...
Biometrics for kids
04 Jan, 2025

Biometrics for kids

ALTHOUGH the move has caused a panic among weary parents mortified at the thought of carting their children to Nadra...
Kurram peace deal
03 Jan, 2025

Kurram peace deal

It is the state’s responsibility to ensure that people of all sects can travel to and from the district without fear.
Pension reform
03 Jan, 2025

Pension reform

THE federal government has finally implemented several parametric reforms introduced in the last two budgets to...
The Indian hand
03 Jan, 2025

The Indian hand

OFFICIALS of the Modi regime were operating under a rather warped sense of reality, playing out Bollywood fantasies...