| PAUL
JENKINS (1923-
)
Paul Jenkins, an artist originally associated
with abstract expressionism, exhibits in his mature works a
redefining of color, light and space on the canvas surface.
Born in Kansas City, Missouri in 1923, Jenkins
worked as a teenager in a ceramics factory, where he was first
exposed to color intensity and the creation of form. From age
14 to 18, he studied drawing and painting at the city's Art
Institute.
Initially interested in drama, Jenkins received
a fellowship to the Cleveland Playhouse, then continued his
dramatic studies in Pittsburgh at the Drama School of the Carnegie
Institute of Technology.
Deciding to become an artist, Jenkins moved
to New York City in 1948 and studied at the Art Students League.
During Jenkins's three years at the League, Yasuo Kuniyoshi
and Morris Kantor were his influential instructors.
While Jenkins continued to live and paint in
New York City, his personal explorations took a metaphysical
turn, which would ultimately become dominant in his work.
P.D. Ouspensky's The Search of the Miracu/ous
changed the artist's thoughts on human growth and limitations,
while the Chinese I Ching, through its thematic emphasis
on constant change, heightened his interest in flowing paint
on canvas. Painting for Jenkins became an intuitive, almost
mystical process. He commented, "I paint what God is to
me."
In 1953, Jenkins traveled to Paris, where,
a year later, he had his first one-man show. While working at
the American Artists Center, he continued to experiment with
flowing paints, pouring pigment in streams of various thicknesses,
with white thin spills as linear overlays.
Jenkins's intent was to deny stasis and create
a literal and metaphysical sense of dynamism, while maintaining
a sense of unity. Beginning in 1958, Jenkins titled each canvas
Phenomena, with additional identifying words. He believed
the work to be descriptive of the discovery process inherent
in each painting.
Paralleling his beliefs, the artist's paintings
have undergone subtle but definite changes. Beginning in the
early 1 960s, a shift of color saturation and exposure of the
white areas gave Jenkins's canvases an enhanced feeling of illumination.
If Jenkins's technique is unorthodox, he is
in many other ways a traditional artist. He works in an acrylic
medium on traditional linen canvas or fine rag paper. Often
he uses an ivory knife or a brush for finishing, but never allows
a stroke to show.
Widely exhibited, Jenkins now lives alternately in Paris and
New York City. |