A NOTE ABOUT SOURCES

THE BIOGRAPHER’S TASK OF TELLING THE STORY OF A REMARKABLE artist and a courageous woman is rendered more difficult because so many of the usual written sources are lacking. Lee never told her own story, and she left behind few personal letters or other written accounts. In the mid-1960s, Krasner was urged to write a memoir by the literary agent, Oscar Collier. He recommended one ghostwriter, but Lee rejected him, through her trusted attorney, Gerald Dickler.1 Collier next tried to persuade her to work with Parker Tyler, a film and art critic whom he had successfully represented, sending her Tyler’s latest book and its reviews.2 Krasner, who knew Tyler, appears to have let the project drop, because the next year (1968), she asked her friend B. H. Friedman to write a biography of Pollock, a challenge he accepted and met, telling not hers but Pollock’s story, as she intended. In the end, their long friendship broke up over her desire to suppress his biography.3 Krasner came to distrust biographers in general.

Doing justice to Lee Krasner challenges biographers and art historians alike, which may be one reason why some who have written about her and the abstract expressionist movement have confused dates and facts, garbled stories, and even overlooked her active role at significant moments in art history. Most such errors have gone unchallenged, yet as they multiply and fester unremarked, there is the risk that the public will form false impressions.4 My research was inspired and disciplined by a desire to give Krasner’s qualities and achievements their full and accurate due. In my dual role as an art historian and a biographer, I have tried to sort out what could be known and proven from what was in fact hearsay and in some cases palpable fiction.

I have interrogated sources that have been previously accepted, casting doubt on their reliability. For example, Krasner’s sister, Ruth Stein, who survived her, made disparaging remarks about Lee. Yet my interviews with other family members led me to conclude that Ruth was a tainted witness. When referring to their brother Irving, Ruth claimed that Lee “wanted Irving to be close to her, but he never was. Never.5 Yet Muriel Stein Dressler and Rusty Kanokogi, nieces to both Ruth and Lee, recalled a close relationship between Lee and her eccentric brother, who for years appeared at Lee’s home for family dinners and even “collected art.” Krasner’s nephew, Ruth’s son, Ronald Stein, referred to his Aunt Lee as his “alter-mother” and became an artist, modeling himself on his Aunt Lee and Uncle Jackson.6 Moreover, Ronald’s wife of many years, Frances, recalled that Lee had a troubled relationship with Ruth: “Lee and Ruth could get along for maybe seventeen minutes and then had to be dragged apart. Ruth fumed and seethed and made fists at Lee, who would get angry and then forget it.”7 In my view, Ruth was clearly determined to settle old scores with her deceased older sister. Her negative testimony about Lee seems to be the last shot of a jealous sibling.

Some art historians have challenged the validity of the “spoken word” as evidence and the reliance on interviews in the genre of biography in general. With regard to Krasner and Pollock in particular, concerned readers should consult what the art historian Anne Middleton Wagner has written about how various authors have tried to misuse oral sources “to invent a Pollock,” meaning that they sought to create a mythic figure that differs from Krasner’s actual experience and testimony. Wagner argued that these authors’ “fiction depended on Krasner—on both the woman herself and the character she was assigned to play in the Pollock drama.” Wagner points out that all of these authors had to negotiate “a relationship” to Krasner as “the official repository of Pollock’s memory.”8 Wagner suggested that they chose interviews as a means to reduce Krasner to “one among many witnesses, if a valued one; her word need not be taken as law.”9 It has been my aim to restore Krasner’s voice. I have paid close attention to her spoken words, taking them as clues for further research, which often confirmed and expanded upon her statements. Her testimony almost always proved accurate, but I have pointed out rare cases where she contradicted herself or where she confused dates.

In their biography of Pollock, Steven Naifeh and Gregory White Smith ascribe to Krasner dialogue spoken by a fictional character in B. H. Friedman’s 1975 novel, Almost a Life. Naifeh and Smith describe their sourcing as follows: “this novel is a fictional account of JP and Lee Krasner by a friend, in which many of the details are taken from their lives.”10 However, B. H. Friedman told me that his fictional couple was not modeled on Krasner and Pollock.11 Indeed, the character of the wife in his novel is not even an artist. Friedman insisted to me that he invented these characters and all their dialogue. Even without Friedman’s clear denial, dialogue from the novel ascribed to Krasner did not ring true to many who knew Krasner, nor is it consistent with the facts of her life and social environment as reconstructed by my research. Yet the words from Friedman’s novel placed in quotation marks in a biography suggest an authenticity that is damaging to Krasner. For example: “According to one friend, she [Krasner] described herself…as ‘an old maid. A fucking old maid.’”12

Naifeh and Smith also assigned Krasner an even more colorful bit of dialogue from Friedman’s novel, spoken by his “LK character” as they call her: “It was an embarrassingly slow start for a woman, who, at the National Academy of Design, ‘never went anywhere without a diaphram [sic].’ ‘If a guy interested me, really interested me,’ Lee once said of her student days, ‘I slept with him because I wanted to know him better and wanted him to know me better. That was my morality.’”13 These fictional quotes portray Krasner as promiscuous at a time when she was completely devoted to Igor Pantuhoff, as her contemporaries have testified. The credits for these quotations in Friedman’s novel are available only in the source notes of the Pollock biography, and it is easy to understand how some readers would assume that Krasner made these statements in one of her many oral interviews, even though she did not.

Readers familiar with the literature on Krasner, Pollock, and abstract expressionism may note that I have omitted a few previously published stories about Krasner because of information that makes them unconvincing. In one instance, I discovered that two related, but conflicting stories appear in two well-known books. Both cannot be true, for, with the exception of Krasner, the main characters are not even the same, though the plots are almost identical. The authors in question, Naifeh and Smith in their Pollock biography and Andrea Gabor in an essay on Krasner in her 1995 book, Einstein’s Wife, based their conclusions on interviews.14 One story, recounted by Naifeh and Smith, who interviewed Fritz Bultman, purports to be about Krasner’s interaction with Willem de Kooning and has been repeated in a 2004 biography of de Kooning by Mark Stevens and Annalyn Swan, who cite Naifeh and Smith’s Pollock biography as their only source for this story.15

Andrea Gabor recounted the second, related story (without de Kooning), which she heard from Bultman’s wife, Jeanne, who dated Igor Pantuhoff after Lee, but well before she married Fritz. The climax of each tale is that Krasner, fully clothed and dressed up at a party, got thrown into a shower—either by Fritz Bultman in Naifeh and Smith’s version or by Igor Pantuhoff in Gabor’s account.16 Since Jeanne Bultman also told me that Igor constantly talked to her about Lee, I conclude that she was surely Fritz’s source for this story, which he or someone else garbled.17

Even though Krasner was present at the creation of the abstract expressionist movement, she had reason to complain that she was too often ignored in historical accounts focused on the “great men.” In their biography of de Kooning, Stevens and Swan tell a story in which Krasner was a major player, but fail even to mention her: For the Works Projects Administration (WPA) de Kooning produced a study for an abstract mural, only to be forced from the project because he was an illegal Dutch immigrant and not an American citizen. Krasner’s assignment was to enlarge his study, so she placed it on the studio wall where she worked.18 Since she could not afford a space of her own, she was using part of a studio at 38 East Ninth Street shared by Igor Pantuhoff and George McNeil. She later recalled that de Kooning often dropped by to check on her progress.

Yet Stevens and Swan, misled by another of Bultman’s faulty recollections, report that it was Igor Pantuhoff who “placed a study for one of de Kooning’s WPA murals on his studio wall.”19

They identify the little-known Pantuhoff as Lee Krasner’s “boyfriend.” Bultman had spoken to Irving Sandler of “Pantuhoff, a Russian who was a friend of both Graham’s and Gorky’s. And he hung one of those very large murals that de Kooning did for the WPA in his loft on Ninth Street then.”20 Sandler tried to get George McNeil to confirm this, leading the witness: “And de Kooning was also working in this [building on Ninth Street]?” But McNeil replied with emphasis: “No, de Kooning was not working in that building.” Sandler: “Or he had a big picture of de Kooning?” McNeil: “Penticof [Pantuhoff]?” Sandler: “Yes.” McNeil: “Maybe. Could well be, I don’t remember it though. Penticof was Lee Krasner’s boyfriend at the time. I remember him in that relationship. He had the studio in the front and I think I would remember if de Kooning had been [worked] there. Or he might have had it in his apartment.”21

Neither Krasner’s WPA assignment to enlarge and finish de Kooning’s mural nor her identity as an artist was ever mentioned in Sandler’s history, first published in 1970, as Abstract Expressionism: The Triumph of American Painting.22 Sandler also left Krasner out of his subsequent accounts of the art of the 1950s and of later decades.23 This despite the positive reviews he wrote of her shows at the time they took place. Even more inexplicably, in his recent return to the subject, Sandler still omits Krasner’s work but now attempts to explain why she was left out: “Lee Krasner should be included in the Abstract Expressionist canon. She is not because she kept out of the New York scene for personal reasons; it would have threatened her marriage to Jackson Pollock…. Her first one-person show was in 1951 at the Betty Parsons Gallery.”24 Sandler’s contention is simply not supported by the evidence, especially because Krasner showed her work in group shows in New York during the 1940s and the 1950s.

Sandler claims that “had she wanted to she could have been included among the Irascibles in their famous [1950] photograph in Life, but she did not.”25 Sandler never explains how he knows this; perhaps he imagines that Krasner could just have invited herself to join the group when the artist Barnett Newman phoned and asked if he could speak with Pollock. But this does not seem persuasive.

David Anfam, in a history of abstract expressionism written two decades after Sandler’s first account, pays Krasner more attention and gives her what reads like begrudging credit: “suffice it to say that the woman tagged ‘Pollock’s girl’ deserves a place, late developer as she was, in any balanced survey.”26 Anfam’s description of Krasner as a “late developer” belies the fact that in the same discussion he also acknowledged that she was making “all-over paintings” before Pollock did, pointing out that her Little Images “were more prescient than [Pollock’s] in one notable respect…. This ‘all-over’ structure makes the Little Image hypnotic in their own right.”27 In fact, he makes her seem innovative and early, not “late.”

Gender-based attitudes, such as those of Sandler, Anfam, and others, inspired revisionists like the art historian Ann Eden Gibson, who, in 1986, began to study abstract expressionist artists who had been omitted from the canonical list due to their gender, sexual preference, or racial identity. Her study was published in 1997.28

Despite such studies and recent publications focused entirely on Krasner, untruths about her continue to proliferate. A Swiss curator recently labeled Krasner “a committed Communist,” who “moved to Long Island with Pollock in search of a ‘simple life,’ following their marriage in 1945.”29 It is difficult to imagine how this curator came to his conclusion; he cites no evidence to support it.30 Such false accusations must be taken seriously in a country that has witnessed periodic Red Scares and where some municipalities still attempt to ban books from schools. Belief that such an invidious charge were true might even prompt provincial American museums to cash in on Krasner’s growing prestige on the international market and divest their collections of major examples of her work, acquired for modest prices at the time her reputation was almost completely eclipsed by Pollock.

Both Krasner the artist and Krasner, Pollock’s wife, were central to the development of abstract expressionism. The catalogue raisonné made reproductions of the entirety of her work accessible. Finally, we can relate her extraordinary life and mind to the art she struggled to make and to her achievement in bringing both her own and Pollock’s work to the public.