Working amid a critical period in the rise of American modernism, Ralph Rosenborg was a leading contributor to the stylistic development and acceptance of abstract expressionism. A New Yorker until the last few months of life, he was born in Brooklyn in 1913 to Swedish immigrants. In his youth he sketched scenes of the Long Island countryside while his mother worked as a domestic cook. During high school Rosenborg began training in art seriously through the School Art League at the American Museum of Natural History. He went on to study privately from 1930 to 1933 with Henriette Reiss, an associate of Kandinsky. His teacher’s insights into European culture prompted Rosenborg to explore avant-garde developments, causing him to abandon his academic style to explore his interests in gesture and abstraction. While delving into modernism despite the stigma applied to American abstraction at the time, Rosenborg‘s skills were put to use in both the Public Works of Art Project and the Teaching, Easel, and Mural divisions of the Works Progress Administration. While in the Mural division he worked alongside Arshile Gorky, and was in the company of modernists such as Ad Reinhardt, William Baziotes, and Joseph Stella in the Easel division. After his experience teaching within the WPA, Rosenborg became part of the original faculty at the Brooklyn Museum School, and held positions at New York’s Public Schools 9, 43, and 72, as well as the University of Wyoming and University of North Carolina.
From the opening of his first solo show of oils and watercolors at New York’s Eighth St. Playhouse in 1935, Rosenborg regularly exhibited in New York and throughout the country. In 1936 he became a founding member of the American Abstract Artists, participating in the group’s annual exhibitions and contributing to their multi-faceted efforts to bring attention to the development of modern art in America. In 1938 he contributed the essay “Non-Objective Creative Expression” to the Yearbook that accompanied the AAA’s second annual exhibition at the Gallery of American Fine Arts Society. Rosenborg’s veiled layering of paint and his gestural evocation of landscapes often set his work apart from those he exhibited beside in the AAA, who were more concerned with the solid forms of Cubism. More contemporaneous with the direction of Rosenborg’s work were the expressionist interests of “The Ten,” a group of abstract painters including Mark Rothko, Adolph Gottlieb, and Louis Schanker, who formed to promote experimentation within modern art. Rosenborg joined “The Ten” and took part in several exhibitions during his involvement with the AAA’s formation in the late 1930s. Alike to Gottlieb, as well as contemporary Paul Klee, Rosenborg explored the use of symbols and featured hieroglyphics in a number of works. On the whole, however, Rosenborg’s style was directly based in nature, abstracting landscape forms and developing atmospheric depth in layers of color. His expressionistic take on abstraction relied on sensory impressions, demonstrating the artist’s interaction with reality.
Beginning in the late 1930s Rosenborg took up work as a guard for Baroness Hilla Rebay’s Museum of Non-Objective Painting, a position shared by Jackson Pollock. The direction of Rosenborg’s paintings soon influenced many artists in his circle, from Pollock to Willem de Kooning, and shared with these painters a catharsis and energy of gesture. Rosenborg’s amassed body of work anticipated the full developments of abstract expressionism for his vigorous and forceful handling of his medium, in which paint was often squeezed directly onto the work’s support. In 1949 and 1950, when abstract expressionism was still in the early stages of becoming a cohesive style, Rosenborg took part in Studio 35, a series of evening discussions on subjects of avant-garde art moderated by Alfred H. Barr, Jr., Richard Lippold, and Robert Motherwell. In addition to lectures from Jean Arp, Adolph Gottlieb, Jimmy Ernst, Willem de Kooning, Ad Reinhardt, John Cage, and Harold Rosenborg, which depended on the interaction of the general public, a closed three-day session was held for the pioneering artistic figures involved in the series. Rosenborg was invited to join along participants William Baziotes, Louise Bourgeois, Hans Hofmann, David Hare, Ibram Lassaw, Barnett Newman, and David Smith. On the last day’s session, Rosenborg partook in discussions on the possible terms for the arising stylistic movement. Though the descriptions Abstract Symbolist and Abstract Objectionist were discussed on that day, the group’s work would soon come to be identified as Abstract Expressionist.
In 1966 Rosenborg traveled to Europe through a grant awarded by the National Council of the Arts. During the 1970s he became largely reclusive, but remained committed to painting. His work would exhibit frequently throughout the next several decades, including exhibitions hosted by the State Department and U.S. Embassy of Dublin as well as the Butler Institute of American Art. In 1991 after suffering a stroke, he and wife Margaret moved to Portland, Oregon, where he died on October 22 of that year. Through the aggressive, intimate handling of his medium, and critical leadership among the dominant abstract art groups of New York, Ralph Rosenborg optimizes the bold developments of abstract expressionist art in America.
Written by Zenobia Grant Wingate
Chronology
1913 Born in New York City, June 9
1929 Began studies in painting at the School Art League, American Museum of Natural History
1930-1933 Studied privately with Henriette Reiss, student of Kandinsky
1935 First solo show of oil paintings and watercolors at Eighth St. Playhouse, NYC
1936-1938 Taught at the Brooklyn Museum School.
1937 First exhibition with the American Abstract Artists
1937-1938 Exhibited with “The Ten,” promoting American abstraction
1949-1950 Partook in Studio 35 discussions on avant-garde art
1951 Marriage to Margaret
1966 Traveled in Europe through National Council of the Arts award.
1991 Solo show at Snyder Fine Art, SoHo
1992 Moved to Portland, Oregon after suffering a stroke. Died October 22
Awards
The Milton and Sallery Avery Foundation
1960 Childe Hassam Award, American Academy of Arts and Letters
1966 Arts and Humanities Award, National Council of the Arts,
National Endowment for the Arts
1981 Hereward Lester Cooke Foundation
1982 Esther and Adolph Gottlieb Foundation
Solo Exhibitions
1935 Eighth St. Playhouse
1937-1939 Artists Gallery
1939 East River Gallery
1940 Lincoln School Art Gallery, Columbia University
1944 Nierendorf Galleries
1948-1950, 1974 Jacques Seligmann Galleries
1952-1954 Davis Galleries
1957 Black Mountain College
1961 Gallerie Internationale
1964 International Gallery
1991 Snyder Fine Art
1999 Farnsworth Art Museum
2007 Hollis Taggart Galleries
Group Exhibitions
1934 Salons of America
1935, 1938 Portland Art Museum
1937 American Abstract Artists
1938, 1961 San Francisco Art Museum
1939 Seattle Museum of Art
1942 Yale University Art Gallery
1944, 1956 Newark Museum of Art
1945 Cincinnati Museum of Art
1948 Chicago Art Institute
1949 Brooklyn Museum of Art
1950 Chicago Art Institute
1951 National Arts Club
1956, 1957, 1976 Whitney Museum of American Art
1949, 1959 The Corcoran Gallery of Art
1959 New York Coliseum
1963 The New School for Social Research
1966 The Jewish Museum
1973 University of Notre Dame Art Gallery
1977 University of New Mexico
1979 Butler Institute of American Art
1982 The United States Embassy, Dublin, Ireland
1991 Zimmerli Art Museum
Memberships
1936 “The Ten” (abstract painters)
American Abstract Artists (founder)
Southern Printmakers Society
Scandinavian-American Artists
Federation of Modern Painters & Sculptors
Woodstock Art Association
Public Collections
Works by this artist may be found at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, as well as at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden.
Bibliography
“Ralph Rosenborg, 79, Abstract Painter, Dies.” The New York Times. October 27, 1992.
American Paintings and Sculpture in the University Art Museum Collection. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota, 1986.
Sidney Janis. Abstract & Surrealist Art in America. New York: William Bradford Press, 1944.
Francis V. O’Connor, ed. The New Deal Art Projects, An Anthology of Memoirs. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 1972.
Laurie Lisle. Louise Nevelson: A Passionate Life. New York: Summit Books, 1990.
Susan E. Strickler and Elaine D. Gustafson. The Second Wave: American Abstraction of the 1930s and 1940s: Selections from the Penny and Elton Yasuna Collection. Worcester, MA: Worcester Art Museum, 1991.
Isabelle Dervaux. “The Ten. An Avant-Garde Group of the 1930s.” Archives of American Art Journal, Vol. 31, No. 2 (1991), 14-20.
Michael Leja. Reframing Abstract Expressionism: Subjectivity and Painting in the 1940s. Yale University Press, 1997.
B.H. Friedman. Jackson Pollock: Energy Made Visible. Da Capo Press.
Jeffery Wechsler. Pathways and Parallels: Roads to Abstract Expressionism. New York: Hollis Taggart Galleries, 2007.