originally posted by Thor:
I'm also not saying that's what the wines are, but rather that it's the direction Cornelissen's working philosophy seems to be moving...doing less and thus revealing how much more there is to do than there was before. He's tried to make some wines that interest him, but rather than having achieved that and expressed satisfaction is now talking about the need for multi-generational projects whose outcomes he probably won't see; this isn't coming about because he's expanding, or because he's been successful and can now afford to experiment, but because he's on a deliberate path of doing less.
"Reinhardts strategy of denial echoed his conviction that Modernism itself was a negative progression, that abstraction evolved as a series of subtractions, and he was creating the last or ultimate paintings. Rather than forecasting the death of painting as a viable art form, however, Reinhardt was instead affirming paintings potential to transcend the contradictory rhetoric that surrounded it in contemporary criticism and the increasing commercial influences of the market. As art historian Yve-Alain Bois suggests in his study of the artist, what Reinhardt hoped to realize recalls the aspirations of Negation Theology, a method of thoughtevident in Platonism, Neo-Platonism, and early Christianityemployed to comprehend the Divine by indicating everything it was not. The artists attraction to the mystical side of negation arose from his appreciation of Eastern art and religion, namely the abstract, all-over patterning of Islamic design, the poetically reductive space of Chinese and Japanese landscape painting, and the meditative, ascetic quality of Zen Buddhism. The last he encountered through his friendship with the poet Thomas Merton, who was also a Trappist monk and authority on Zen. Reinhardt saw his own dark canvases, with their classic, geometric compositions, monastic repudiation of anything extraneous, and contemplative depth as a fusion of Eastern and Western traditions.
However hermetic Reinhardts black paintings may seem, they were not created in a vacuum. The kind of profound, self-reflexive abstraction he advocated was partially a product of, and reaction to, the climate of Cold War America. Despite the iconoclasm of his aesthetic discourse, Reinhardt was actively engaged in political and social issues throughout his life. During the early 1940s, his editorial cartoons appeared in the leftist newspapers The New Masses and PM. Later, he participated in the antiwar movement, protesting against Americas involvement in Vietnam, and donated his work to benefits for civil rights activities. An aesthetic moralist, Reinhardt sought to create an art form thatin its monochromatic puritycould overcome the tyrannies of oppositional thinking."
-Nancy Spector for the Guggenheim Museum Catalog Entry on Ad Reinhardt
link here