Authors: Deborah Solomon
192 | Pollock offered to demonstrate: interview with Arnold Newman, Dec. 1984. |
193 | “little bit short of cash”: ibid. |
193 | “He talked”: interview with Dorothy Seiberling, Jan. 1984. |
193 | “If you want to see a face”: JP to |
193 | “J |
194 | “adjustment you have made”: letter from Dr. James Wall to JP, Aug. 23, 1949, Pollock |
194 | “maybe it would seem exploitative”: interview with Rebecca Tarwater Hicks, May 1984. |
194 | “completely understand”: |
194 | “movie cowboy Roy Rogers”: |
194 | “made peace with themselves”: James Valliere, interview with Daniel T. Miller, |
195 | “He couldn’t read the article while we were there”: James Brooks to James Valliere, |
195 | “The Model A’s a good car”: Du Plessix and Gray, p. 53. |
195 | “straight American boy”: ibid. |
197 | “Don’t let an artist”: interview with Alfonso Ossorio, Jan. 1984. |
197 | “very silent”: ibid. |
198 | “more than ever repetitious”: Carlyle Burrows, New York |
198 | “Late Work by Kandinsky”: Stuart Preston, “Late Work by Kandinsky Pollock, and Others,” |
198 | “the best show he has ever had”: card from Stella Pollock to Frank Pollock, postmarked |
199 | “an insane dinner party”: letter from LK to Ossorio, n.d., |
199 | “Terrific, terrific”: interview with Esteban Vicente, a friend and colleague of Pollock’s, |
200 | “What did you think”: interview with Milton Resnick, April 1984. |
200 | “Pollock broke the ice”: de Kooning made the comment at a memorial service for Pollock |
201 | left before the lecture was over: letter from LK to Ossorio, n.d., |
201 | “Jackson didn’t like doing things with coffee”: John Gruen, |
202 | “notoriously hostile to advanced art”: “18 Painters Boycott Metropolitan; Charge ‘Hostility |
202 | “The Irascible Eighteen”: editorial, “The Irascible Eighteen,” New York |
202 | “like bankers”: B. H. Friedman. “The Irascibles: A Split Second in Art History,” |
202 | “neutral territory”: ibid. |
204 | “Piccolo discorso sui quandri di Jackson Pollock”: undated magazine clipping from |
204 | “Do you know any Italian”: interview with Marie Levitt Pollock, July 1983. |
205 | “shrug off”: “Chaos, Damn It!” |
205 | “at least for artist Pollock”: letters, |
206 | “I can’t decide whether this painting is finished”: telephone interview with Rudy |
208 | “The painting is finished”: Hans Namuth, “Photographing Pollock,” in Barbara Rose, |
208 | “Do you have any more?”: interview with Hans Namuth, Dec. 1983. |
210 | drew attention to Pollock’s technique: see Barbara Rose, “Namuth’s Photographs and |
210 | “At a certain moment”: Harold Rosenberg, “The American Action Painters,” |
211 | “I lost contact with my first painting on glass”: Jackson Pollock movie, produced |
214 | “The big thing right now”: letter from Jay Pollock to Frank Pollock, postmarked Dec. |
215 | “meaningless embellishment”: Robert M. Coates, “Extremists,” |
215 | “personal comment”: Howard Devree, |
215 | “richest and most exciting”: B.K. [Belle Krasne], “Fifty-seventh Street in Review,” |
215 | didn’t know where his paintings came from: letter from Clement Greenberg to the author, |
215 | “I found New York terribly depressing”: letter from JP to Ossorio and Dragon, Jan. |
215 | “I really hit an all time low”: letter from JP to Ossorio, n.d., |
216 | “Who, exactly, has he hit”: interview with Clement Greenberg, Dec. 1983. |
216 | “like a movie star”: Jeffrey Potter, |
217 | “while I was in there”: ibid., pp. 195–96. |
217 | “One couldn’t entertain a dialogue”: Deborah Solomon, “An Interview with Helen Frankenthaler,” |
217 | “Dali once told me”: Selden Rodman, |
218 | “I heard you were talking yesterday”: Fielding Dawson, |
218 | “I loathed the place”: Barbara Rose movie, |
218 | “Don’t bother bringing him up”: interview with Dan Rice, 1983. |
218 | “above water”: letter from JP to Ossorio, n.d., |
219 | “jurying was something I swore I’d never do”: letter from JP to Ossorio, n.d., in |
219 | “That’s awful”: telephone interview with the painter Leon Golub, a member of the Momentum |
219 | “The jurying was disappointing”: letter from JP to Ossorio and Dragon, n.d., |
219 | “not too happy”: letter from JP to Ossorio and Dragon, June 7, 1951, |
219 | “My home is in Springs”: Jackson Pollock movie, produced by Hans Namuth and Paul Falkenberg, |
220 | “this is exotic music”: telephone conversation with Paul Falkenberg, Sept. 1985. |
220 | “feel good about them”: letter from JP to Ossorio, n.d., |
220 | “stops the show”: B.H. [Betty Holliday], |
221 | “the chef-d’école”: Henry McBride, |
221 | “Mr. and Mrs. Jackson Pollack”: |
222 | “How did it go?”: Barbara Rose, “Pollock’s Studio: Interview with Lee Krasner,” in |
222 | “some of her best painting”: letter from JP to Ossorio and Dragon, June 7, 1951, |
223 | “a very quiet summer”: letter from JP to Ossorio and Dragon, n.d., |
224 | “Should I cut it here?”: B. H. Friedman, “Interview with Lee Krasner,” |
224 | “the non-objectivists will find them disturbing”: letter from JP to Ossorio and Dragon, |
225 | “This is |
225 | “could you do it in color?”: Friedman, “An Interview with Lee Krasner,” |
225 | “My paintings aren’t selling”: Greenberg interview. |
226 | “If Pollock were a Frenchman”: Clement Greenberg, “Feeling Is All,” |
226 | “All I want is five hundred dollars”: interview with Arloie McCoy, Dec. 1983. |
226 | “Where’s the emulsion?”: interview with Alfonso Ossorio, Feb. 1984. |
227 | “I have been skinned alive”: letter from JP to Ossorio, March 30, 1952, |
227 | standing on a high structure: B. H. Friedman, |
227 | a vacuum cleaner: William Lieberman, |
227 | “Two cars”: ibid. |
227 | “Weather clear”: This report is in the files of the Town of East Hampton police department. |
227 | Jackson Pollock, Artist: |
228 | “I never pushed sales”: Ken Kelley, “Betty Parsons Taught America to Appreciate What |
228 | “my financial mess”: letter from JP to Betty Parsons, n.d., |
228 | “If you cannot give me 15%”: letter from Betty Parsons to JP, June 25, 1951, Pollock |
228 | “Betty sailed last Sat”: letter, from JP to Ossorio, n.d., |
229 | “very anxious”: letter from Betty Parsons to JP, Jan. 31, 1952, Pollock Archive. |
229 | “Since Manet”: interview with Clement Greenberg, Dec. 1983. |
230 | “Do you think the market”: interview with Sidney Janis, Jan. 1984. |
230 | “The edge is gone”: Thomas B. Hess, |
231 | “Here, get out of here”: interview with Jane Smith, the widow of Tony Smith, Dec. |
231 | “a bicycle, an automobile tire”: |
231 | “I still respect you as an artist”: Cindy Nemser, |
231 | “very severe shock”: ibid. |
232 | “For crissakes, Jackson”: Stanley P. Friedman, “Loopholes in ‘Blue Poles,’ ” |
233 | “looked like vomit”: ibid. |
233 | Newman regretted the request: telephone conversation with Annalee Newman, 1985. |
233 | “This won’t come through”: Barbara Rose, “Pollock’s Studio: An Interview with Lee |
235 | “This is Jackson Pollock”: Janis interview. |
236 | the highest price: Israel Shenker, “A Pollock Sold for $2 Million, Record for American |
236 | “not bad paintings”: Clement Greenberg to James Valliere, unpublished interview, March |
236 | “The last thing I want”: Greenberg interview. |
237 | “You’re a fool”: ibid. |
237 | “At a certain moment”: Harold Rosenberg, “The American Action Painters,” |
237 | Pollock was appalled: William Rubin, “Pollock as Jungian Illustrator: The Limits of |