influences from European
Tachisme (from the French tache, meaning
Fluctuating alliances of artists explored work variously tagged 'art informei', 'art autre' or '
tachisme'--among them Maria Helena Vieira da Silva, Nicolas de Stael, Serge Poliakoff, Jean-Michel Atlan, Jean Fautrier, and Jean Dubuffet.
The substantial travelling exhibition 'Klee and CoBra: A Child's Play (2011-2012)', for example, attracted more than 250.000 visitors, while the Guggenheim Museum in New York devoted a new presentation from its permanent collection to CoBrA,
tachisme and Art informel during the summer of 2012.
The Dusseldorf-based group was one of a number of mid-twentieth-century European artist collectives with a concern for exploring audience activation via an art of motion and light as well as creating monochromatic and modular geometric works--a mode of facture that countered the continent's then-dominant tendencies of art informel or
tachisme. (2) While the core members of Zero hailed from Germany, they deliberately avoided "null" (the German word for the term), settling on the more cosmopolitan "zero," a move which signaled a desire to extend artistic dialogues beyond borders and transcended the strictures of national identity as a mode of organizing works of art.
Dans mes toiles, j'ai essaye de devoiler la femme d'une facon discrete avec un gestuel modere a un
tachisme inspirateur...En regardant tes tableaux, nous regardons vraiment un style artistique qui t'appartient ...
Critics sometimes compare her work to the emotive, intuitive paintings of the Lyrical Abstraction and
Tachisme movements--a comparison she embraces.