You must first login or register to follow this artist.

(1926 – 2009), United States

Charles Seliger Biography

A painter of small-scale abstractions, Charles Seliger (1926-2009) associated with Abstract Expressionists in the 1940s and 1950s and shared their practice of automatism as adopted from the Surrealists. Like many of his contemporaries searching for a universal language of abstraction in the post-war period, Seliger turned to prehistoric ideas, symbols, and myth as a wellspring of imagery. Sam Hunter, reviewing the artist's 1948 exhibition at Carlebach Gallery for the New York Times, commented that the artist's work 'carries the stamp of unborn mysteries and primitive rite.'1

Read More

Yet unlike those of his fellow Abstract Expressionists, the artist's paintings conjure elaborate, geologic fantasy worlds inspired by a seemingly microscopic observation of natural phenomena: cells, soil layers, fossils, and archaeological remains that speak to the enduring aspects of human civilisation. Paintings by his better-known colleagues Mark Rothko and Jackson Pollock engulf viewers with their overwhelming scale, yet Seliger's smaller paintings invite close contemplation and provide equally absorbing visual experiences. The artist pioneered a novel stylistic approach in which he bridged a certain naturalist approach with abstraction, which he described in these terms:

'My works, even when most abstract, reflect the natural world. Strata of the earth, forms relating to botany and biology and the ocean depths, all figure in the imagery of my work, no matter how abstract. The images are developed with a feeling for the intricacy of the structure of matter. There is a sense of something happening organically among the forms. The images are changing, there is suggestion of movement in the earth, of botanical development, always a sense of growth. A metamorphosis occurs.'2

In creating his works, Seliger often undertook a laborious process, one which pairs automatist painting with an obsessive reworking of the surface. He began a composition by building up the surface with ample paint, and often other materials, such as wax, to achieve a dense picture plane; he then proceeded by scraping away layers to reveal different tones, shapes, and textures. He would repeat this process as many as seven times, a method that mimics the alternating sense of revelation and concealment offered by the finished compositions. The artist explained of his process: 'I examine and contemplate the surface, and begin the journey of discovery, developing the revealed forms, evolved after weeks of preparation.'3

Extremely precocious and largely self-taught, the New York-born artist achieved early recognition—at the age of nineteen—and had his first solo show at Peggy Guggenheim's Art of This Century gallery in 1945. Seliger was only nineteen when Guggenheim praised the young artist in a letter to the British art critic Herbert Read: 'His painting is extremely organic, and his technique highly accomplished, and worked out with extreme care and in considerable detail. His show was very successful, and for over a year the Museum of Modern Art has been contemplating the purchase of a canvas, but being extremely cautious and rather conservative, they seem to be a little frightened of his youth.'4 When the museum acquired Natural History: Form within Rock, a gift from August Hanniball, Jr, in June 1948, Seliger became the youngest artist to be represented in the Museum of Modern Art's permanent collection.

Like his friend Mark Tobey, Seliger regularly exhibited at the Willard Gallery in New York in the 1950s and 1960s. The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York mounted a retrospective exhibition in 1986 and currently holds the largest collection of Seliger's work.

  1. Seliger, interview by George Perret, 1979, cited in Francis V. O'Connor, Charles Seliger: Redefining Abstract Expressionism (Manchester, Vermont: Hudson Hills Press, 2002), 42.
  2. Quoted in O'Connor, Charles Seliger, 13-14.
  3. Jeffrey Wechsler, Abstract Expressionism, Other Dimensions, exh. cat. (New Brunswick, N.J.: Jane Vorhees Zimmerli Art Museum, Rutgers, State University of New Jersey, 1989), 127.
  4. Quoted in O'Connor, Charles Seliger, 40.

Courtesy Hollis Taggart, New York.

Charles Seliger
featured artworks

View 12 More
Primal Markings I by Charles Seliger contemporary artwork painting
Charles Seliger Primal Markings I, 1943 Oil on canvas
63.5 x 45.7 cm
Hollis Taggart Request Price & Availability
Primal Markings III by Charles Seliger contemporary artwork painting
Charles Seliger Primal Markings III, 1943 Oil on canvas board
41 x 31.1 cm
Hollis Taggart Request Price & Availability
Embryo in Flight by Charles Seliger contemporary artwork painting
Charles Seliger Embryo in Flight, 1945 Oil on canvas
61 x 50.8 cm
Hollis Taggart Request Price & Availability
Blue Cavern by Charles Seliger contemporary artwork painting, drawing
Charles Seliger Blue Cavern, 1956 Charcoal and oil on illustration board
38.1 x 48.3 cm
Hollis Taggart Request Price & Availability
Sea Fossils by Charles Seliger contemporary artwork painting
Charles Seliger Sea Fossils, 1952 Oil on canvas board
24.1 x 34.9 cm
Hollis Taggart Request Price & Availability
Earth Strata I by Charles Seliger contemporary artwork painting
Charles Seliger Earth Strata I, 1952 Oil and tempera on board nailed to wood panel
27.9 x 35.6 cm
Hollis Taggart Request Price & Availability
Strata by Charles Seliger contemporary artwork painting
Charles Seliger Strata, 1946–48 Tempera, ink and wax on illustration board
38.1 x 27.9 cm
Hollis Taggart Request Price & Availability
View 12 More

Charles Seliger
recent exhibition

Represented by this
Ocula Member Gallery

Learn more about the market for works
by Charles Seliger.
Enquire for a confidential discussion. Enquire Now
Simon Fisher, Ocula CEO
Ocula Advisor
Simon Fisher
Christoper Taylor, Ocula Advisor
Ocula Advisor
Christopher Taylor
Eva Fuchs, Ocula Advisor
Ocula Advisor
Eva Fuchs
Rory Mitchell, Ocula Advisor
Ocula Advisor
Rory Mitchell
Ocula discover the best in contemporary art icon.
Follow Charles Seliger
Stay ahead.
Receive updates on new artworks,
exhibitions and articles.
Your personal data is held in accordance with our privacy policy.
Follow
Do you have an Ocula account?
Ocula discover the best in contemporary art icon.
Get Access
Join Ocula to request price and availability of artworks, exhibition price lists and build a collection of favourite artists, galleries and artworks.
Do you have an Ocula account? Login
What best describes your interest in art?

Subscribe to our newsletter for upcoming exhibitions, available works, events and more.
By clicking Sign Up or Continue with Facebook or Google, you agree to Ocula's Terms & Conditions. Your personal data is held in accordance with our Privacy Policy.
Thank you for joining us. Just one more thing...
Soon you will receive an email asking you to complete registration. If you do not receive it then you can check and edit the email address you entered.
Close
Thank you for joining us.
You can now request price and availability of artworks, exhibition price lists and build a collection of favourite artists, galleries and artworks.
Close
Welcome back to Ocula
Enter your email address and password below to login.
Reset Password
Enter your email address to receive a password reset link.
Reset Link Sent
We have sent you an email containing a link to reset your password. Simply click the link and enter your new password to complete this process.
Login