Franz Kline

Painter

Birthday May 23, 1910

Birth Sign Gemini

Birthplace Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, U.S.

DEATH DATE 1962, New York City, NY, U.S. (52 years old)

Nationality United States

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1910

Franz Kline (May 23, 1910 – May 13, 1962) was an American painter.

1930

During the late 1930s and early 1940s Kline worked figuratively, painting landscapes and cityscapes in addition to commissioned portraits and murals.

1931

After graduation from high school, Kline studied art at Boston University from 1931 to 1935, then spent a year in England attending the Heatherley School of Fine Art in London.

During this time he met his future wife, Elizabeth V. Parsons, a British ballet dancer.

1938

She returned to the United States with Kline in 1938.

Upon his return to the country, Kline worked as a designer for a department store in New York state.

1939

He then moved to New York City in 1939 and worked for a scenic designer.

It was during this time in New York that Kline developed his artistic techniques and gained recognition as a significant artist.

He later taught at a number of institutions including Black Mountain College in North Carolina and the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn.

1940

He is associated with the Abstract Expressionist movement of the 1940s and 1950s.

Kline, along with other action painters like Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning, Robert Motherwell, John Ferren, and Lee Krasner, as well as local poets, dancers, and musicians came to be known as the informal group, the New York School.

His individual style can be first seen in the mural series Hot Jazz, which he painted for the Bleecker Street Tavern in Greenwich Village in 1940.

The series revealed his interest in breaking down representative forms into quick, rudimentary brushstrokes.

The personal style he developed during this time, using simplified forms, became increasingly abstract.

Many of the figures he depicted are based on the locomotives, stark landscapes, and large mechanical shapes of his native, coal-mining community in Pennsylvania.

This is sometimes only apparent to viewers because the pieces are named after those places and objects, not because they actually look like the subject.

With the influence of the contemporary New York art scene, Kline worked further into abstraction and eventually abandoned representationalism.

From the late 1940s onward, Kline began generalizing his figurative subjects into lines and planes which fit together much like the works of Cubism of the time.

His use of black and white is very similar to paintings made by de Kooning and Pollock during the 1940s.

There also seem to be references to Japanese calligraphy in Kline's black and white paintings, through his exchange with the Japanese avant-garde calligraphy group Bokujinkai and its leader Morita Shiryu, although Kline later denied that connection.

1946

In 1946, the Lehighton, Pennsylvania, Post of the American Legion commissioned Kline to do a large canvas depicting the town where he had attended high school.

1948

De Kooning's wife Elaine gave a romanticized account of the event, claiming that, in 1948, de Kooning advised an artistically frustrated Kline to project a sketch onto the wall of his studio, using a Bell–Opticon projector.

Kline described the projection as such:

"A four by five inch black drawing of a rocking chair...loomed in gigantic black strokes which eradicated any image, the strokes expanding as entities in themselves, unrelated to any entity but that of their own existence."

As Elaine de Kooning suggests, it was then that Kline dedicated himself to large-scale, abstract works and began developing his personal form of Abstract Expressionism.

However, even though Willem de Kooning recalls that Kline delved into abstraction "all of a sudden, he plunged into it", he also concedes that it took considerable time, stating that "Franz had a vision of something and sometimes it takes quite a while to work it out."

Over the next two years, Kline's brushstrokes became completely non-representative, fluid, and dynamic.

It was also at this time that Kline began painting only in black and white.

He explained how his monochrome palette was meant to depict negative and positive space by saying, "I paint the white as well as the black, and the white is just as important."

1950

Although he explored the same innovations to painting as the other artists in this group, Kline's work is distinct in itself and has been revered since the 1950s.

Kline was born in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, a small community in the Coal Region of Northeastern Pennsylvania.

When he was seven years old, Kline's father killed himself.

During his youth, he moved to Lehighton, Pennsylvania, where he graduated from Lehighton High School.

His mother later remarried and sent him to Girard College, an academy in Philadelphia for fatherless boys.

Kline's first one-man show took place between October 16 and November 4, 1950, at the Egan Gallery, 63 East 57th Street, and consisted of eleven abstract paintings.

Color was a rare element in the paintings: brown underpainting near the bottom of Nijinsky and fleeting hints of green in Leda.

1956

He spent summers from 1956 to 1962 painting in Provincetown, Massachusetts, and died in 1962 in New York City of a rheumatic heart disease, ten days before his 52nd birthday.

Kline's artistic training focused on traditional illustrating and drafting.

2016

The mural Lehighton was acquired from the American legion post in 2016 by the Allentown Art Museum in Allentown, Pennsylvania, and is today on permanent exhibition there.

It is widely believed that Kline's most recognizable style derived from a suggestion made to him by his friend and creative influence, Willem de Kooning.