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Show Notes:
In this episode, Sami finally delivers the Abstract Expressionism story he's been promising. It started with Instagram showing him Mark Rothko's rectangles — red on orange, black on gray — and his honest first reaction: "I could do that." Then came a video about people crying in front of Rothko paintings, and Sami went down a three-week rabbit hole that changed everything.
What he found wasn't just about rectangles or drip paintings. It was about a bankrupt American government paying artists during the Great Depression, World War II pushing Europe's greatest painters to New York, a Manhattan museum betting on broke bohemians from 8th Street, and the CIA quietly using abstract art as a Cold War weapon. This is how New York replaced Paris. This is how two artists — one who died in a car, one with a razor — created the century's most mocked and most valuable work.
Sami breaks down what abstract and expressionism actually mean, walks through the movement's wild history, and ends with six practical tips for enjoying abstract art — including the most important question you should ask when standing in front of a painting that makes no sense.
Highlights:
- Why Sami hated abstract art and what Instagram did to change his mind
- Mark Rothko's rectangles and the people who break down crying
- What "abstract" means: opposite of figurative, no recognizable subject (Mondrian's grids, Malevich's black squares)
- What "expressionism" means: painting how the artist feels, not what they see
- Kandinsky as the first to drop the subject entirely (1910)
- How WWII chased Europe's greatest painters across the Atlantic to the US
- The Manhattan museum that bet everything on broke bohemians from 8th Street
- The CIA's role: turning drip paintings and color fields into Cold War weapons
- How New York stole the crown from Paris and became the art capital
- Jackson Pollock's drip paintings and tragic death
- Mark Rothko and why his paintings make people cry
- The question everyone asks: "Could I actually paint that myself?"
- Six tips for enjoying abstract art: give it time (5-10 minutes), adjust distance, let your eyes wander, mimic the gestures, ask what it's trying to make you feel (not what it is), and timestamp it (context matters)
Artists Mentioned:
- Mark Rothko — rectangles, color fields, tragic suicide
- Jackson Pollock — drip paintings, tragic car death
- Wassily Kandinsky — first to drop the subject entirely (1910)
- Piet Mondrian — grids with primary colors
- Kazimir Malevich — black squares on white canvas (1915)
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