Framed.
SearchMovementsPalette
Log inCreate account
SearchMovementsPalette
@framedapp.art·@framedapp.art
Privacy PolicyTerms of ServiceSettings© 2026 Framed
Two Women's Torsos

Two Women's Torsos

Willem de Kooning

1952

Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

0

liked it

Sign in to log this artwork
Find a better imageUpload an image

Description

A pioneer of Abstract Expressionism, Willem de Kooning experimented with the human form throughout his career, which reached its apex in the early 1950s with his celebrated Woman series. Two Women’s Torsos was created during an intense campaign in which the artist focused on drawings related to his Woman paintings, which were exhibited together with this and other drawings at the Sidney Janis Gallery, New York, in 1953. De Kooning’s drawings are admired for their number and variety as well as for the artist’s expressive technique, exemplified here by his gestural use of pastel in concert with charcoal. This drawing’s velvety texture and almost violently animated surface are characteristic of the approximately one hundred sheets that remain from his intense work on the woman theme in 1952 and 1953. Also typical of de Kooning’s art is the way in which Two Women’s Torsos references aspects of related paintings but stands alone as an independent work. As the artist tried to jettison traditional modes of composition, he used drawing as a primary vehicle for the sequential development of his most important early body of work.

Search for more information about this painting on Google

Medium

Pastel, charcoal, graphite pencil, and fixative on two joined sheets of Strathmore Seconds paper

You might also like

American Gothic

American Gothic

Grant Wood

1930

Nighthawks

Nighthawks

Edward Hopper

1942

A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte

A Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande Jatte

Georges Seurat

1884

Paris Street; Rainy Day

Paris Street; Rainy Day

Gustave Caillebotte

1877

Two Sisters

Two Sisters

Pierre-Auguste Renoir

1881

At the Moulin Rouge

At the Moulin Rouge

Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec

1892