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" Ad Reinhardt’s “Black” Paintings "


Document Type : AL
Record Number : 1081711
Doc. No : LA125340
Call No : ‭10.1163/15685292-01903002‬
Language of Document : English
Main Entry : Arden Reed
Title & Author : Ad Reinhardt’s “Black” Paintings [Article]\ Arden Reed
Publication Statement : Leiden: Brill
Title of Periodical : Religion and the Arts
Date : 2015
Volume/ Issue Number : 19/3
Page No : 214–229
Abstract : By education and inclination, Ad Reinhardt (1913–1967) was a politically engaged artist. His gifts suited him well for producing cartoons and collages in left-wing publications. But could he integrate his abstract, avant-garde painting with his activism? The solution came largely through his readings and lifelong friendship with Trappist monk Thomas Merton. Reinhardt’s famous “black” paintings embody negation theology—defining the deity by what it is not. Further, because these paintings require several minutes of intense looking simply to grasp, they exemplify what I call “slow art,” which recreates in a secular idiom the conditions for rumination common to spiritual practices. To jettison the ecclesiastical was not, for Reinhardt, to abandon the spiritual: Merton described his own “black” painting as “a very ‘holy’ picture … an ‘image’ without features to accustom the mind … to the night of prayer and … set aside trivial and useless images that wander into prayer and spoil it.” By education and inclination, Ad Reinhardt (1913–1967) was a politically engaged artist. His gifts suited him well for producing cartoons and collages in left-wing publications. But could he integrate his abstract, avant-garde painting with his activism? The solution came largely through his readings and lifelong friendship with Trappist monk Thomas Merton. Reinhardt’s famous “black” paintings embody negation theology—defining the deity by what it is not. Further, because these paintings require several minutes of intense looking simply to grasp, they exemplify what I call “slow art,” which recreates in a secular idiom the conditions for rumination common to spiritual practices. To jettison the ecclesiastical was not, for Reinhardt, to abandon the spiritual: Merton described his own “black” painting as “a very ‘holy’ picture … an ‘image’ without features to accustom the mind … to the night of prayer and … set aside trivial and useless images that wander into prayer and spoil it.”
Descriptor : “black” painting
Descriptor : Ad Reinhardt
Descriptor : negation theology
Descriptor : slowness
Descriptor : socially-engaged artist
Descriptor : Thomas Merton
Location & Call number : ‭10.1163/15685292-01903002‬
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10.1163-15685292-01903002_36544.pdf
10.1163-15685292-01903002.pdf
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