Matthew Collings TV - Willem de Kooning - Stevens & Swan -
Why a painting by Willem de Kooning looks like a de Kooning is because of the way it’s done: that fantastically battered impacted look is achieved by constantly working at it. Matthew Collings, This is Civilisation IV: Uncertainty, BBC 2007
Art never seems to make me peaceful or pure. I always seem to be wrapped in the melodrama of vulgarity. I do not think … of art as a situation of comfort. Willem de Kooning
In the days before De Kooning establishing himself formally as a painter, Willem de Kooning had a variety of experiences that helped him to define himself. His influences by friends and the times were surprising. Of the singular influences was his relationship to music. In the early thirties … De Kooning made one astonishing and symbolic purchase. Just when the Depression was destroying the livelihood of millions of people, including that of many artists, De Kooning bought the best and most expensive record player money could buy – a miraculous machine that could summon ‘God and all those angels up there’. Called a Capehart high-fidelity system, it was one of the first to change records automatically. It cost then the prodigious sum of $700, more than half of De Kooning’s annual salary at A S Beck; he got an advance to pay for it. With this purchase, De Kooning announced that he would not use this money to make himself conventionally respectable, even during the hard, early years of the Depression. He did not buy a house or a car, get married, have a baby, or stash away money against hard times. Instead, he professed himself sublimely irresponsible, a man nourished by music rather than mundane realities. And yet, it was still music rather than art that prompted his expansive gesture, for he could not yet find a comparable fluency, vitality, or extravagance in art. M Stevens & A Swan, De Kooning: An American Master, 2004