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LACMA's collection of contemporary art contains almost 2000 works from across the Americas, Europe, and Asia, created between 1969 and the present. A diverse range of mediums and forms are represented, including painting and sculpture, installation and conceptual art, and video and film. At the end of 2007, the collection will move to new quarters at the Broad Contemporary Art Museum at LACMA, designed by architect Renzo Piano. There it will be integrated with works from the holdings of collectors and LACMA patrons, Eli and Edythe Broad. The Broads' collections are a remarkable compendium of significant works by some of the most important artists of the last four decades. They complement the museum's holdings in exciting ways; taken together the collections form a rich and nuanced history of art after World War II.
 

 

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Ocean Park Series No. 49  

Richard Diebenkorn

United States, Oregon, Portland, active California, 1922-1993
Ocean Park Series No. 49, 1972
Oil on canvas
93 x 81 in. (236.2 x 205.7 cm)
M.73.96
Purchased with funds provided by Paul Rosenberg & Co., Mrs. Lita Hazen, and the David E. Bright Bequest
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During the late 1940s and early 1950s Richard Diebenkorn associated with Elmer Bischoff, David Park, and other young San Francisco artists whose innovative abstract expressionist paintings reflected the restless energy of the years after World War II. Yet, by the mid-1950s, Park, Bischoff, and Diebenkorn had each turned to representation, a reversal symbolized by Park's abrupt destruction of his abstract works late in 1949: one afternoon he jettisoned all of them at the Berkeley city dump.

At the time this switch of polarity seemed both retrogressive and shocking; in fact it was part of a more general postwar revival of figuration. Yet each of the three painters remained preoccupied with the flat plane, tension between colors, and the viscous surfaces of abstraction. Diebenkorn continued to explore these elements in the California cityscapes, terraces and rooms, and beach vistas that attested his long study of Henri Matisse's interior scenes and landscapes.

Diebenkorn acknowledges a fascination with natural landscape forms seen from the air and the passages of tilling, planting, harvesting, and erosion. All this emerges in the Ocean Park series, which marked his return to abstract painting shortly after he moved from the San Francisco Bay Area to Los Angeles in 1965.

The Ocean Park paintings, about 140 in number, are generally tall canvases composed in variations of vertical and horizontal bars appearing over or under thin, washy panels of color. Like the plow's course through the fields of an aerial landscape, Diebenkorn's tracks remain in his paintings. He paints out, paints over, looks again, guided by the revelations the act of painting unfolds before him.

 
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