Films

Adolph Gottlieb and the Irascible Eighteen

In 1950, The Metropolitan Museum of Art held an exhibition titled American Painting Today. A core group of Abstract Expressionists, led by Adolph Gottlieb and including Mark Rothko, Louise Bourgeois, Jackson Pollock, and others, protested the exhibition selection committee's decision to exclude "advanced art," writing a now-famous letter to the director of the museum as a statement of their position.

Here's the story of that fabled letter and a resulting photograph of “The Irascibles,” as told by Sanford Hirsch, Executive Director of the (opens in a new window) Adolph & Esther Gottlieb Foundation, and Dr. Kent Minturn.

  • Films — Adolph Gottlieb and the Irascible Eighteen, Apr 4, 2019