The Christian Science Monitor

'Ninth Street Women' focuses on forgotten stars of Abstract Expressionism

Abstract Expressionism may be more popular than any other topic in the history of American art.  In a few short years following World War II, a small group of talented, swashbuckling, impoverished, and isolated artists overcame the indifference of the art world, as well as their often self-destructive behavior, and decisively moved the center of Western art from Paris to New York City.

For the most part – as is the case with much of art history – the story of Abstract Expressionism is a story about men.  In “Abstract Expressionism: The Triumph of American Painting,”

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