Skip to Main Content

Open today: 10am-5pm

When

Ongoing

Where

Edna and Stanley Tuttleman Gallery 274

About

Explore radical innovations in painting that testify to a pursuit of freedom and expression in the midst of a period marked by social and political unrest in the United States and abroad. From Alma Thomas’s mosaic-like painting of flowers to Sam Gilliam’s suspended, draped canvas, these works speak to an upending of barriers—be they artistic, ideological, racial, or rooted in gender stereotypes. By rethinking and systematically probing conventions associated with the painted canvas, these works ultimately speak to the desire for a deeper, more fundamental connection to nature, the body, movement, and light.

Image Gallery

Dakar I

Sam Gilliam

Epsilon

Lynda Benglis

Robe Series, The Descent

Dorothea Rockburne

To Weave through Time

John E. Dowell, Jr.

1972/F003

Claude Viallat

Untitled

Eva Hesse

Image Gallery

Curators

Amanda Sroka, Assistant Curator of Contemporary Art

Sponsors

This installation has been made possible with support from the museum’s endowment, through the Daniel W. Dietrich II Fund for Excellence in Contemporary Art.

Expanded Painting in the 1960s and 1970s | Philadelphia Art Museum