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Police Gazette by Willem de Kooning

Police Gazette

Willem de Kooning (1955)

<strong>Police Gazette</strong> converts tabloid scandal into a field of charged marks: acidic yellow grounds, slashed blacks, and jolts of teal and coral collide like headlines in motion. De Kooning’s scraped, reworked surface turns the city’s noise into <strong>gesture-as-event</strong>, where half-hinted limbs and curb-like edges surface, then dissolve. As a key mid-1950s canvas, it anchors his shift to the so-called <strong>abstract urban landscapes</strong> within Abstract Expressionism <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.

Interchange by Willem de Kooning

Interchange

Willem de Kooning (1955)

Interchange condenses the city’s churn into an arena of <strong>figure–ground flux</strong>, where mustard yellows, lilac, and sea‑blue collide and are corralled by black, calligraphic lines. De Kooning turns scraping, repainting, and slashing gestures into a living map of <strong>exchange</strong> between flesh and architecture, motion and arrest <sup>[2]</sup><sup>[3]</sup>.

Woman III by Willem de Kooning

Woman III

Willem de Kooning (1952–53 (often dated 1953))

Woman III stages a face‑off between <strong>figuration and abstraction</strong>: a looming, front‑facing body whose breasts and hips jut forward even as limbs smear into eddies of paint. The mask‑like eyes and toothy grin toggle between <strong>seduction and menace</strong>, while the scraped, turbulent surface asserts painting as a <strong>combat zone</strong> rather than calm depiction <sup>[1]</sup>.

Figure with Meat by Francis Bacon

Figure with Meat

Francis Bacon (1954)

Francis Bacon’s Figure with Meat fuses a screaming pontiff with two flayed carcasses that hang like grotesque wings, locking power and flesh into the same dark box. Through <strong>cage-like lines</strong>, <strong>stage-lit isolation</strong>, and paint handled as <strong>raw meat</strong>, Bacon asserts a brutal equivalence: sanctity and sovereignty are only bodies destined to decay <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.

Eugène Boch by Vincent van Gogh

Eugène Boch

Vincent van Gogh (1888)

Vincent van Gogh’s 1888 portrait of <strong>Eugène Boch</strong> turns a friend into a visionary presence: a glowing, ocher head set before an <strong>infinite blue</strong> pricked with stars. The lone bright star at upper left and the cobalt field make the warm face and jacket <strong>vibrate</strong> from the night, declaring art as vocation rather than mere likeness <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[2]</sup>.

L'Arlésienne by Vincent van Gogh

L'Arlésienne

Vincent van Gogh (1888)

In L'Arlésienne, Vincent van Gogh distills a moment of inward pause: a woman from Arles leans her cheek on her hand before a <strong>butter‑yellow wall</strong>, her <strong>black-and-blue silhouette</strong> set against a warm field. The <strong>red parasol</strong> and <strong>green gloves</strong> lie unused on the table, signaling a suspension of public persona in favor of private thought <sup>[1]</sup><sup>[3]</sup>.