Release 2005 by Robert Goodnough
Release
Robert Goodnough’s Release: A Late-Career Triumph of Abstract Expressionism
Few artists sustained the energy of Abstract Expressionism into the 21st century as Robert Goodnough did. Release (2005), created when the artist was in his late eighties, distills six decades of experimentation into a single, explosive composition. The painting’s jagged forms and electric palette reject the quiet minimalism that dominated his earlier work, instead embracing a raw, almost violent dynamism. Goodnough, a second-generation Abstract Expressionist, had spent his career refining a language of fractured planes and bold color—here, he unleashes it with the urgency of an artist confronting mortality.
The title itself suggests liberation, and the canvas delivers: thick, slashing strokes of cobalt and crimson collide with fractured geometric shards, as if the picture plane were shattering under internal pressure. Unlike the meditative abstractions of his 1960s period, Release feels immediate, almost confrontational. The Museum of Modern Art has noted how later Abstract Expressionists like Goodnough “rejected the idea of a ‘finished’ work,” and this painting embodies that philosophy—its edges feel unresolved, its energy still expanding beyond the frame.
From Post-Painterly Abstraction to Unbridled Gesture
Goodnough’s trajectory mirrors the broader shifts in American abstraction. Emerging in the 1950s alongside peers like Helen Frankenthaler and Morris Louis, he initially aligned with the Post-Painterly Abstraction movement, favoring stained canvases and thinned pigments. By the 1970s, however, his work grew more architectural, incorporating hard-edged forms that nodded to Cubism’s fractured spaces. Release marks a dramatic departure from both phases. Here, the canvas becomes an arena for pure gesture, with none of the restraint that defined his earlier periods.
The painting’s aggressively physical surface—built from layers of acrylic applied with brushes, palette knives, and even his hands—recalls the early Abstract Expressionists’ emphasis on the act of painting itself. Yet Goodnough’s approach remains distinct. Where Pollock’s drips suggested chaos, Goodnough’s strokes feel deliberate, almost surgical in their precision. The tension between control and spontaneity gives Release its unique charge.
Goodnough’s late works like Release reject nostalgia for Abstract Expressionism’s heyday. Instead, they prove the movement’s language could still evolve—even six decades after its birth.
The Anatomy of Release: Color and Composition
Chromatic Conflict
The painting’s palette pits complementary hues against one another with calculated ferocity. Ultramarine blues clash with cadmium reds, while interruptions of ochre and viridian create visual “breathing room” amid the chaos. Goodnough’s color choices aren’t arbitrary: the high contrast forces the viewer’s eye into constant motion, mirroring the work’s thematic concern with liberation. Unlike his 1990s works, where color often served structural roles, here it becomes the primary vehicle for emotional impact.
Fractured Space
The composition defies traditional perspective, instead constructing depth through overlapping transparent layers. Thin washes of diluted acrylic allow underlying marks to bleed through, creating a sense of accumulated time. This technique—perfected during his Post-Painterly phase—takes on new urgency in Release, where the exposed underlayers suggest something being revealed rather than constructed. The largest “shard” in the lower right anchors the composition, its weight counterbalancing the explosive energy above.
Own This Explosive Late-Period Masterwork
This 30×40 cm gallery-framed print captures every layer of Goodnough’s textured original, from the thickest impasto to the most delicate washes. Free worldwide shipping ensures your print arrives ready to hang—no hidden fees, no minimum order.
Add to Cart — Ships FreeWhere Release Commands Attention
This print’s high-contrast palette and dynamic composition demand a setting that can accommodate its energy. In modern interiors, position it against matte white or deep charcoal walls to let the colors vibrate—avoid busy patterns that would compete with the artwork’s complexity. The 30×40 cm size works ideally above a console table in an entryway or as the focal point of a minimalist gallery wall. For traditional spaces, contrast its abstraction with classic furniture: imagine it hanging over a Chesterfield sofa or between flanking bookshelves. The frame’s neutral profile ensures the artwork remains the star, while its substantial depth (3 cm) adds presence without overwhelming the composition.
What frame and materials are included?
Each print arrives in a solid wood frame with a matte finish, chosen to complement the artwork’s palette. The print itself uses archival inks on pH-neutral paper, with a UV-protective acrylic glaze to prevent fading.
Where do you ship, and how long does delivery take?
We offer free shipping to all countries, with no minimum purchase. Production typically takes 2–3 business days, followed by 5–10 business days for delivery via tracked courier.
How long will the colors stay vibrant?
The combination of archival pigments and UV-blocking glaze ensures your print resists fading for decades under normal lighting conditions. Avoid direct sunlight to maximize longevity.
What’s your return policy?
You may return your framed print within 30 days of delivery for a full refund, no questions asked. We cover return shipping costs if the item arrives damaged or defective.
Sources & Further Reading
- The Museum of Modern Art. "Abstract Expressionism: Works on Paper." moma.org
- The Art Story. "Post-Painterly Abstraction Movement Overview." theartstory.org
- Smithsonian American Art Museum. "Robert Goodnough: Five Decades of Abstraction." americanart.si.edu
More Works by Robert Goodnough
From his early Post-Painterly experiments to his late-period resurgence, these prints trace Goodnough’s relentless reinvention.
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Ready to Bring Goodnough Home?
This framed print of Release arrives ready to hang, with free worldwide shipping and a 30-day return guarantee. Own a piece of Abstract Expressionism’s late flowering—no hidden costs, no compromises.
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