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Wednesday, June 3, 2026 |
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| WCMA Presents Jackson Pollock at Williams College |
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Jackson Pollock, Number 2, 1949, 1949. Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute, Museum of Art, Utica, New York. © 2006 Pollock-Krasner Foundation/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.
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WILLIAMSTOWN, MA.- The Williams College Museum of Art (WCMA) proudly presents, Jackson Pollock at Williams College, a unique opportunity to see three of Pollocks famous drip paintings in the Berkshires. These works are extremely fragile, due to the materials with which they were painted, and almost never travel. One of the paintings, Number 2, 1949, which was treated in March at the Williamstown Art Conservation Center, is being displayed on a specially designed free-standing plinth. The backing of Number 2, 1949 has been removed so that visitors can literally see beneath the surface of this monumental, sixteen-foot painting. This is the first time in history that one of Pollocks paintings has been displayed in this revealing way.
Jackson Pollock at Williams College features Number 2, 1949, from the Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute, Museum of Art; Number 13A: Arabesque, from the Yale University Art Gallery; and Number 7, 1950, from New Yorks Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). The exhibition demonstrates how conservation can shed light on Pollocks complex drip-painting method, choice of unconventional materials, and his stylistic evolution. It also examines the best methods of preserving, authenticating, and experiencing Pollocks work. The exhibition also considers Pollocks use of the frieze format and how it affects the composition, style, and ultimately, the meaning of these three works.
This exhibition is a curatorial collaboration between WCMAs new director, Lisa Corrin, and Tom Branchick, director of the Williamstown Art Conservation Center, with assistance by Jason Vrooman, a Williams graduate student and the Judith M. Lenett Memorial Fellow. The Lenett Fellowship is awarded to a graduate art history student to combine a hands on conservation treatment and art history research.
Pollock used the same commercially dyed red fabric as a background for both Number 2, 1949 and Number 13A: Arabesque. In March, Branchick removed a consolidant varnish coating from the background of Number 2, 1949 that was applied in 1959 by conservators, with the best of intentions. This coating altered both tone and reflectance of the intended presentation surface. The Yale Pollock, Number 13A : Arabesque, was never varnished and served as the control picture by which Branchick and Vrooman compared and contrasted the surfaces of these two works.
The analysis at the Williamstown Art Conservation Center and the exhibition at WCMA add to the scholarship of Kirk Varnedoe and Pepe Karmel, who, in 1998, published a pivotal study of Pollocks work for a major retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York.
This is an exceptional opportunity for Williams and for the Berkshires, stated Lisa Corrin, who came to WCMA this past October to assume the directorship. We are enormously appreciative of our colleagues at the Williamstown Art Conservation Center, the Munson-Williams Proctor Arts Institute, Museum of Art, the Yale University Art Gallery, and MoMA for their help in making this important project a reality and so quickly. How fortunate for our community to have these masterpieces of modern art on display again at WCMA for the first time in over fifty years.
In December 1952, critic Clement Greenberg organized A Retrospective Show of the Paintings of Jackson Pollock, a landmark early survey of Pollocks work, which opened at Bennington College and then traveled to Williams. That exhibition included Autumn Rhythm: Number 30, 1950, now in the collection of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and Number 2, 1949 from the Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute, Museum of Art, now widely accepted as some of Pollocks greatest achievements.
Jackson Pollock at Williams College is a special tribute to Kirk Varnedoe, Williams Class of 1967. Varnedoe was the Chief Curator of Painting and Sculpture at the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). In addition to organizing MoMAs groundbreaking Pollock retrospective, he also curated retrospectives of American painters Cy Twombly and Jasper Johns. He taught at the New York Institute of Fine Arts and was awarded a MacArthur genius Fellowship in 1984.
"Kirk Varnedoe was an extraordinarily bold and visionary curator of modern art," Williams President Morton Owen Schapiro said. "How appropriate it is, then, to honor him here at the college he loved so dearly with this imaginative and striking exhibition." Kirk Varnedoe's friends hope to establish a professorship at Williams in his honor. He died of cancer in 2003 at age 57.
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