An illustrated study of Mary Heilmann's seductive 1979 abstract
painting in hot pink and black, Save the Last Dance for Me.
You want beauty? I'll give you beauty!--Mary Heilmann
Mary Heilmann is one of the most important abstract painters of her
generation. Her distinctively fluid, humorous, and bright canvases
combine the modes of Abstract Expressionism with a vibrant Pop
sensibility. Heilmannn's 1979 painting in hot pink and black,
evocatively titled Save the Last Dance for Me, marked a shift in the
artist's perspective. Heilmann describes it: Now the work came from a
different place. Instead of working out of modernist non-image
formalism, I began to see that the choices in the work depended more on
content for their meaning. This beautifully illustrated study of Save
the Last Dance for Me explores the development of Heilmann's work, and
the way it continues to engage us--psychologically, sensually, and
socially.
The three bright pink rectangles in Heilmann's painting seem to dance
off the edge of the canvas, through a black field that seems dark as a
nightclub after midnight--or perhaps the three are actually one pink
rectangle, seen in a blissfully formal time lapse, moving across the
dance floor/canvas. These definitively modernist geometric forms coexist
with a sense of movement in real time. For many, abstraction may have
been dancing its last dance in 1979, but Heilmann's bright pink
rectangles boogie on.