The Whitney's Collection: Selections from 1900 to 1965

2023

Hear from a range of artists, curators, and scholars speaking about works on view.

An abstract painting with strokes of orange, blue, pink, and black.

Ed Clark: I have a hard time with titling things. That one back there, is called Winter Bitch. That’s a hell of a name.

Narrator: The painter Edward Clark made this work after a five-year stay in Paris, including a particularly cold winter. In an interview with the artist Jack Whitten, Clark describes the city’s influence on his work. 

Ed Clark: I mean New York at that very moment was not considered the capital of the art world—it was Paris. 

Narrator: Clark began using a push broom instead of a brush to move paint around his canvases. He used them to create thick, gestural bands of color, like the blacks and pinks here. 

Ed Clark: The main thing that influenced me in France was the color—the color of the great artists there were more memorable than American color for some reason. There’s something about France—the angle of the sun or something. It gets into your unconscious a little bit. Color was the French thing.

Narrator: This interview is the copyright of BOMB Magazine, New Art Publications, its Contributors, and Edward Clark. All rights reserved. Edward Clark’s oral history by Jack Whitten can be read in its entirety at bombmagazine.org.


Ed Clark, Winter Bitch, 1959. Acrylic on canvas, 77 × 77 in. (195.6 × 195.6 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from the Painting and Sculpture Committee and partial gift of the artist 2019.307. © Ed Clark

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A 30-second online art project:
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Learn more about this project

Learn more at whitney.org/artport

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