Age, Biography and Wiki

Frederick Hammersley was born on 5 January, 1919 in Salt Lake City, Utah, is an American abstract painter. Discover Frederick Hammersley's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is he in this year and how he spends money? Also learn how he earned most of networth at the age of 90 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation N/A
Age 90 years old
Zodiac Sign Capricorn
Born 5 January, 1919
Birthday 5 January
Birthplace Salt Lake City, Utah
Date of death 31 May, 2009
Died Place Albuquerque, New Mexico
Nationality United States

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 5 January. He is a member of famous painter with the age 90 years old group.

Frederick Hammersley Height, Weight & Measurements

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Frederick Hammersley Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Frederick Hammersley worth at the age of 90 years old? Frederick Hammersley’s income source is mostly from being a successful painter. He is from United States. We have estimated Frederick Hammersley's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
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Timeline

1919

Frederick Hammersley (January 5, 1919 – May 31, 2009) was an American abstract painter.

1936

His studies later took him back to Idaho, at Idaho State University in Pocatello from 1936 to 1938 and then to Los Angeles for the Chouinard Art Institute starting in 1940.

There he studied everything from figure painting to lettering and his instructors included Rico Lebrun.

His artistic training was interrupted by a stint in the U.S. Army Signal Corps and Infantry as a graphic designer.

1942

His World War II service in England, Germany, and France was from 1942 to 1946.

1945

Fortuitously, he was stationed in Paris near the end of his service, and he took the opportunity to attend the École des Beaux-Arts in 1945.

During this period, Hammersley met Pablo Picasso, Georges Braque and Constantin Brâncuși, visited their studios, and made sketches.

1946

Hammersley returned to the U.S. and resumed his studies at Chouinard (1946), with financial assistance from the G.I. Bill.

A year later, he continued his art education at the experimental Jepson Art Institute for another three years.

1948

He began a teaching career at Jepson in 1948, staying until 1951.

1953

Subsequent teaching positions included Pomona College (1953–62), Pasadena Art Museum (1956–61), Chouinard (1964–68), and University of New Mexico (1968–71).

Hammersley first gained widespread acclaim when his paintings were featured in the landmark Four Abstract Classicists exhibit, which also showcased the work of Karl Benjamin, John McLaughlin, and Lorser Feitelson.

"Hunch" paintings, produced from 1953 to 1959, start by laying down an initial shape.

Other shapes are successively added, and the whole evolves in unplanned ways.

Hammersley explained: "My painting begins with a hunch, no plan, no theory, just a feeling to make a shape. That shape dictates what and where the next will go, and so on..."

The final canvas may be suggestive of a still-life or a landscape, although still quite abstract.

Los Angeles Times art critic Christopher Miles wrote that "they show Hammersley to have been, from the start, as keen a student of Modernist style as he was of color and composition."

1959

His participation in the 1959 Four Abstract Classicists exhibit secured his place in art history.

Frederick Hammersley was born in Salt Lake City, Utah.

His father, a Department of the Interior employee, moved the family to Blackfoot, Idaho and eventually to San Francisco, where the young Hammersley first took art lessons.

This 1959 exhibit was organized by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and curated by Jules Langsner, who, with Peter Selz, coined the term "hard-edge painting" to describe the work of these artists.

The exhibit, which traveled to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Institute of Contemporary Arts in London and Queen's University in Belfast, Northern Ireland, was praised for its presentation of cool abstractions which were very different from the emotional ones of the established abstract expressionist movement.

"Geometrics" are orchestrated compositions of sharp geometric forms, painted from 1959 to 1964, and from 1965 to the mid-'90s.

While more rigidly composed than Hunches, they still retain a degree of playfulness.

A gridded canvas may have sections divided by diagonals or arcs.

The triangles, squares, and other geometric shapes combine to form interlocking relationships to each other, creating a rhythmic composition with interchangeable positive and negative space.

"Organics" consist of freely curving shapes inspired by the natural world.

1964

These works, produced in 1964 and from 1982 into the 2000s, also contain interlocking shapes, but, as Miles wrote, they "are more evocative and suggestive, with elements seeming to probe and penetrate, embrace and envelop one another. Particularly effective is the combination of hard breaks between colors from one shape to the next with gradations between colors within a shape. In Comes Out Eden, #8 (1994), shapes seem to fade in and out, to merge, dematerialize or change states – to behave like chameleons and run hot and cold."

1968

He moved to Albuquerque, New Mexico, in 1968 and took a teaching position at the University of New Mexico; he stopped teaching in 1971 so that he could concentrate full-time on painting.

1973

In 1973 he was honored with a prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship in painting, and he received National Endowment for the Arts fellowships in 1975 and 1977.

Hammersley wrote in an exhibition catalog, "hard-edge is often very hard to take, coming to it cold – or, even to the practiced eye".

He expanded his repertoire beyond hard-edge, dividing his art into three categories: "hunches", "geometrics", and "organics".

2000

In reviewing Visual Puns and Hard-Edge Poems: Works by Frederick Hammersley, a 2000 retrospective, Los Angeles Times critic Leah Ollman wrote that he ... proved himself more a soft-hearted humanist than a hard-edged purist.

...

Hammersley takes several steps toward making his work more accessible, less aloof.

For one, he uses titles as invitations in, catalysts to closer looking.

... [P]unning, free-associative title ideas ... mimic the formal dynamics enacted by the shapes... They joust, contradict, tease, echo and conspire.

Another savvy and refreshing move Hammersley makes is to counter the clean, impersonal precision of hard-edge painting with the amusing presence of his own personality, his own hand.

... Most brilliantly of all, he contains each of his works within wooden frames that he makes by hand... Artificially distressed and self-consciously homey, the frames offset the neat balances of the images within.

They nudge the works into a stylistic no-man's-land, which is all the richer for its internal contradictions and resistance to cut-and-dried uniformity.