VIVIAN SPRINGFORD
Untitled VSF460, 1978-1980
Acrylic staining on collage
30 x 22 in (76 x 56 cm)
(VSP0002)
A contributor to Abstract Expressionism and Color Field
painting, Vivian Springford (b. 1913 Milwaukee, WI; d. 2003
New York, NY) is acclaimed for calligraphic gesture paintings
as well colorful stain paintings featuring glowing, organic
orbs in sensual pastel hues. Springford began her artistic
career as a portraitist and a commercial illustrator during
the 1930s and 1940s while studying at the Art Students
League. In the 1950s, she was drawn into New York Abstract
Expressionist circles, developing friendships with art critic
Harold Rosenberg and artists Pierre Alechinsky, Karel Appel
and Sam Francis.
In the 1970s Springford moved away from calligraphy in
favor of sheer, fluid washes of paint on a lightly primed
canvas. As in the work of Kenneth Noland, Morris Louis
and the other stain painters, who often used no primer,
the acrylic saturates the canvas. In Springford’s works, the
layers of color radiate out from the center forming halo-
like circles. Utilizing entrancing natural colors, the
abstractions are rich with organic reference.
