Spilling Over: Painting Color in the 1960s | Art & Artists
Mar 29–Aug 18, 2019
Spilling Over: Painting Color in the 1960s | Art & Artists
Bob Thompson
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In Triumph of Bacchus, Bob Thompson borrowed compositional elements from Renaissance depictions of the Roman god of wine. He rejected descriptive clarity, however, substituting a vividly hued arrangement in which the figures’ identities are left open-ended. In reimagining these historical sources, Thompson painted in a manner akin to jazz musicians’ innovations, where improvisation was based on a thorough understanding of preexisting styles. Saxophonist Steve Lacy, a friend of Thompson’s, referred to the artist as “jazz himself,” explaining that “the way he painted was like jazz—taking liberties with colors.”