Agnes Martin, Untitled, 1956–57.
Agnes Martin, Untitled, 1956–57.
In the mid-1960s, Agnes Martin was lauded as a herald of the cool geometric
Minimalism that was emerging in the aftermath of Abstract Expressionism,
but she herself declined that claim, for she saw the Minimalist approach as
impersonal and dispassionate. Her disarmingly reticent abstractions use a
combination of ideal geometry and the lightest touch of the artist’s hand to
achieve an unexpected pitch of emotion and feeling.
Martin, who grew up in the Pacific Northwest, as a student in the 1940s was
drawn to the arid, open landscape of New Mexico. The vast Southwestern desert
became a defining experience for her, “I used to paint mountains here in New
Mexico and I thought/my mountains looked like ant hills/I saw the plains driving
out of New Mexico and I thought/the plain had it/just the plane,” as she later
described. In her mature work, from the early sixties onwards, Martin dematerializes
the canvas into a transparent, nonhierarchical field of vision, perhaps
suggesting the experience (rather than the image) of this desert landscape.
By the end of the 1950s Martin’s signature mode had emerged, a spare, muted
palette and geometric vocabulary deployed across a square format (for example,
Window, 1957). The repetitive marks and lines of the continuous allover grid
paintings that Martin began in the early 1960s earned her the reputation of
being an inspiration for the Minimalists. Yet the grid that underlies these paintings
is, as the artist says, never mechanical and never rigid. Through simple
geometry, she found she could pursue a classical perfection that she described
as removed from nature, held only in the mind—drawn rectangles, squares, and
grids in pencil dispensed with traditional notions of composition. Tightly echoing
the weave of her square canvases, paintings such as The Beach (1963), seem
to merge Platonic geometry with an egoless Taoist meditation.
Finding New York City too distracting, Martin moved permanently to the
Southwest in 1967. While giving up painting for close to a decade, she built
an adobe house on a deserted mesa, where she pursued isolation as a means of
seeking inspiration.
Employing the subtlest of hues, both delicate pastels and light grey washes,
Martin’s late paintings seem to emanate light rather than reflect it. In her 1999
Innocent Love series, gently insistent horizontal lines, bounding the color washes,
suggest an infinite space beyond the frames of the five-foot-square canvases.
The theme of innocent love may be related to the artist’s descriptions of the
“untroubled state of mind” (often referred to in her journals) that allows for
“moments of inspiration,” which “added together make what we call sensibility.”
Innocent and untroubled, young children, in Martin’s view, have many more
inspirations than adults: such notions perhaps also contribute to the ethereal
tone of these elusive yet effulgent works.
Nonetheless, the works at the end of a fertile career spanning more than forty
years often contain elements first explored at the time of her formation, the late
1950s. Such unanticipated parallels include a brief return to an ominous black
that now conceals more than it reveals: compare, for example, Untitled #17,
2002 with Untitled, c. 1957, which is hanging to its left, and Earth, 1959, on
its right flank. By means of such juxtapositions, “Trajectories” (December 1,
2007—September 1, 2008) highlights the unexpected but rich dialogue that
links these crucial periods in her art and life.