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Back to In the Studio

Joan Mitchell, Joie de Vivre 1992. Tate. © Estate of Joan Mitchell.

Joan Mitchell

11 rooms in In the Studio

  • Studio Practice
  • Geta Brătescu
  • International Surrealism
  • The Disappearing Figure: Art after Catastrophe
  • Painting with White
  • ARTIST ROOMS: Agnes Martin
  • Infinite Geometry
  • Gerhard Richter
  • Joan Mitchell
  • Painterly Gestures
  • Belkis Ayón and Sandra Vásquez de la Horra

Emotion, nature and physical expression collide in Joan Mitchell’s abstract paintings and prints

Born in Chicago in 1925, Joan Mitchell spent formative periods of her career in New York and Paris. Her large abstract canvases and gestural approach to mark-making led to her affiliation with abstract expressionism. She was one of eleven women included in the movement’s first formal presentation - the 9th Street Exhibition held in New York in 1951. Despite this, Mitchell became known as a ‘second generation abstract expressionist’, a title she considered a ‘put-down’.

For Mitchell, abstraction wasn’t just a means of expression, it was also a way to connect with the outside world. In 1955, she began dividing her time between France and the US, moving to Paris in 1959. In 1968, Mitchell relocated to Vétheuil, thirty-five miles north-west of Paris. Her house, La Tour, overlooked the River Seine and was surrounded by lush trees and fields of flowers. While Mitchell found the environment inspiring her work remained abstract. She commented, ‘I could certainly never mirror nature. I would like more to paint what it leaves me with.’

The open-plan layout of Mitchell’s painting studio in Vétheuil allowed her to work with greater freedom than previous studios permitted. Photographs from the time show the artist surrounded by her enormous, multi-panel paintings. The size of these canvases required an athletic approach to painting, perhaps influenced by her experience as a champion figure skater in her youth.

Most of the works presented here were created in the last two decades of Mitchell’s life, a period marked by the deaths of several important figures, and her own cancer diagnosis. Despite this, painting remained a means of existence for Mitchell, ‘Music, poems, landscape, and dogs make me want to paint… And painting is what allows me to survive.’

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Room 8 and 9

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Joan Mitchell, Urn Burial  1992

1/16
artworks in Joan Mitchell

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Joan Mitchell, In Time  1992

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Joan Mitchell, Mornings on the Bridge  1992

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artworks in Joan Mitchell

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Joan Mitchell, Avenue of Poplars  1992

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Joan Mitchell, South  1989

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Joan Mitchell, Beauvais  1986

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artworks in Joan Mitchell

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Joan Mitchell, Two Sunflowers  1980

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artworks in Joan Mitchell

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Joan Mitchell, Minnesota  1980

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Joan Mitchell, Plowed Field  1971

9/16
artworks in Joan Mitchell

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Joan Mitchell, Red Tree  1976

10/16
artworks in Joan Mitchell

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Joan Mitchell, Tilleul  1978

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artworks in Joan Mitchell

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Joan Mitchell, Cypress  1980

12/16
artworks in Joan Mitchell

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Joan Mitchell, Joie de Vivre  1992

13/16
artworks in Joan Mitchell

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Joan Mitchell, Morning  1992

14/16
artworks in Joan Mitchell

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Joan Mitchell, Cobble Hill  1992

15/16
artworks in Joan Mitchell

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Joan Mitchell, Sky  1992

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artworks in Joan Mitchell

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Art in this room

P12136: Urn Burial
Joan Mitchell Urn Burial 1992
P12131: In Time
Joan Mitchell In Time 1992
P12134: Mornings on the Bridge
Joan Mitchell Mornings on the Bridge 1992
P12137: Avenue of Poplars
Joan Mitchell Avenue of Poplars 1992

Sorry, no image available

Joan Mitchell South 1989

Sorry, no image available

Joan Mitchell Beauvais 1986

Sorry, no image available

Joan Mitchell Two Sunflowers 1980

Sorry, no image available

Joan Mitchell Minnesota 1980

Sorry, no image available

Joan Mitchell Plowed Field 1971

Sorry, no image available

Joan Mitchell Red Tree 1976

Sorry, no image available

Joan Mitchell Tilleul 1978

Sorry, no image available

Joan Mitchell Cypress 1980
P12130: Joie de Vivre
Joan Mitchell Joie de Vivre 1992
P12132: Morning
Joan Mitchell Morning 1992
P12133: Cobble Hill
Joan Mitchell Cobble Hill 1992
P12135: Sky
Joan Mitchell Sky 1992

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