“It’s more than sixty years since Jackson Pollock’s death, and in all that time there has been no major, powerful, at once historical and critical study of his art. Now Michael Schreyach’s superb Pollock’s Modernism is here to supply that lack. For the first time, the epochal all-over drip paintings of 1947–50 as well as the radical black paintings of 1951–52 are given their due in a series of brilliant, in-depth analyses that are also tours de force of theoretical sophistication. From this moment on, discussions of Pollock (and abstract painting generally) will have to reckon with Schreyach’s exemplary account, which is not likely ever to be bettered.” – Michael Fried, author of The Moment of Caravaggio
~Michael Fried
“What is perhaps most distinctive about Pollock’s Modernism is Schreyach’s insistence on drawing distinctions: among the various works within Pollock’s oeuvre and what he convincingly shows to be their markedly different forms of pictorial address; between the literal, material qualities of those paintings and the pictorial ones to which they give rise; and, finally, between the work and the viewer standing before it. It is a remarkable achievement – an account as complex, surprising, and subtly nuanced as the paintings themselves.” – Lisa Florman, Professor and Chair, History of Art Department, The Ohio State University
~Lisa Florman
“Rarely does a book appear that changes the direction of scholarship – this is what Michael Schreyach has accomplished with his deep phenomenological study of Jackson Pollock’s art. Schreyach acknowledges the fine work that has been done in recent decades on the social, cultural, and political context of Pollock’s career. But all too often, he notes, ‘any “Pollock” will do to illustrate some point.’ Schreyach instead analyzes the specific address to the viewer that key paintings by Pollock create. Rather than representing a link in our established cultural history, Pollock comes alive again under Schreyach’s intense scrutiny – the feeling, thinking artist that he was.” – Richard Shiff, Effie Marie Cain Regents Chair in Art, The University of Texas at Austin
~Richard Shiff