Joan Mitchell was born in Chicago on February 12, 1925. After graduating from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1947, she was awarded a James Nelson Raymond Foreign Traveling Fellowship, which took her to France for a year in 1948–49, and it was there that her paintings moved toward abstraction. Returning to New York, she participated in the famous “9th Street Show” in 1951, and soon established a reputation as one of the leading younger American Abstract Expressionist painters. She exhibited regularly in New York throughout the next four decades and maintained close friendships with many New York School painters and poets.
In 1955 she began dividing her time between New York and France, and in 1968 she settled in Vétheuil, a small town in the countryside outside of Paris, where she worked continuously until her death in 1992. During the almost 50 years of her painting life, as Abstract Expressionism was eclipsed by successive styles, Mitchell’s commitment to the tenets of gestural abstraction remained firm and uncompromising. Summing up her achievement, Klaus Kertess wrote, “She transformed the gestural painterliness of Abstract Expressionism into a vocabulary so completely her own that it could become ours as well. And her total absorption of the lessons of Matisse and van Gogh led to a mastery of color inseparable from the movement of light and paint. Her ability to reflect the flow of her consciousness in that of nature, and in paint, is all but unparalleled.”
Mitchell gave personal support to many young artists who came to stay with her at Vétheuil—sometimes for just one night; sometimes for an entire summer. Correspondence in her papers reveals that this generosity often had a life-changing impact on those that spent time with her. Mitchell died in Paris on October 30, 1992. Her generosity in her own lifetime continued after her death with the formation of the Joan Mitchell Foundation, called for in her will in order to create support and recognition for individual artists. In addition, the Foundation mission includes the promotion and preservation of her legacy, which includes her remarkable body of work, her papers, including correspondence and photographs, and other archival materials related to her life and work.
EDUCATION
1950 M.F.A., The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois 1950 Columbia University, New York 1944–47 B.F.A., The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Illinois 1942–44 Smith College, Northampton, Massachusetts
1991 Le Grand Prix des Arts (Peinture) of the City of Paris 1989 Award for Painting, French Ministry of Culture 1987 Honorary Doctorate, the School of the Art Institute of Chicago 1973 Brandeis University Creative Arts Awards; Citation in Painting 1971 Honorary Doctorate, The Western College, Oxford, Ohio 1961 Premio Lissone (Lissone Prize), Milan 1947 James Nelson Raymond Foreign Traveling Fellowship from the Art Institute of Chicago
QUOTE BY JOAN MITCHELL
“I’m happy when I’m painting. I like it.”
WHAT I WISH FOR YOU TODAY
I wish you the spirit to find what makes you happy.