A Closer Look: Art History Seminar
Session 2: Abstract Expressionism and Spirituality
Join us for an in-person three-session seminar on select Mondays—November 3, 10, and 17—inspired by art in the Jewish Museum Collection led by Nelly Silagy Benedek, Deputy Director, Education & Programs.
After the devastation of WWII many artists felt paralyzed. How could they make art that was relevant in a world traumatized so profoundly? For the artists who came to be called Abstract Expressionists, abstraction became a means to explore the power of form and color to prompt active engagement and elicit powerful sensations. Artists referenced the sublime, myths, and mysticism.
This class, the second in a three-part session, examines the connection between the art of Mark Rothko, Barnett Newman, and Lee Krasner, among others, and spirituality.
Course topics:
Monday, November 3: Impressionism and the Dreyfus Affair
Monday, November 10: Abstract Expressionism and Spirituality
Monday, November 17: Conceptual Art and the Image
Tickets: $72 General; $60 Jewish Museum members, students, and seniors.
Classes include a discussion in the newly opened Salon and close looking in the galleries. Price includes all three sessions.

1997-126, Untitled (Jewish Star), Artist: Louis, Photographer: John Parnell, Photo © The Jewish Museum, New York