Abstract expressionism (Engl. Abstract expressionism) movement in abstract art, appeared in the United States in Art Auction in the 1940’s, and is shown primarily works of artists of the so-called New York school. Taking roots in the early works of Kandinsky, partially in Expressionism and dadaizme. Abstract expressionism was influenced by surrealism and its fundamental principle of psychological automatism, rather a South American artist from European masters who went overseas Fine Art Gallery during the Second World War: p. Mondrian, a. Breton, Dali, Ernst, and Matta.
Following the surreal abstract expressionism was preceded by the “liberation” of art from every possible test of reason and logical laws, the goal was made a sudden view of the inner world of the artist, his subconscious in indiscriminate, abstract forms and take an important creative principle in Art Auction, spontaneous, automatic application of paint to canvas, solely under the influence of mental and psychological conditions.
In the fast paced rhythm of artist’s canvas large plane covered with vigorous strokes, in the literal sense of the word flooded streams “at ease, floating colors”. It is often preferred to receive dripping (spraying paint or displacement of the tube) in Art Auctions, inventor of the J. Pollock. The embossed letters was considered the least principled way than the actual product, so the process of creating the painting often took place in public. It was played in front of an audience the view in which the gestures and movements of the artist played the same functional role as the flow of paint that fell and there were spilled across the canvas in Art Auction.
Hence the other name of abstract expressionism, which gave the critic Harold Rosenberg, “action painting”, just that the physical act of painting in a Fine Art Gallery.
Abstract expressionism had prevailed in South American culture up until the 1960’s, combining in itself different in creative quest masters, which, however, does not prevent him from becoming one of the first major currents in South American painting