With abandon and remarkable vision, American post-war artists pursued the almost infinite possibilities of abstraction. Beginning with abstract expressionism in the mid-forties, America’s position as the center of the art world remained virtually unchallenged until the latter part of the 20th century and the emergence of contemporary art as a dynamic international pursuit. But within the context of broadly based invention and aesthetic freedom, abstract expressionism continues to thrive as a source of visual and emotional discovery.

Elise Ansel's work references historical masterpieces, transforming their visual language into a fresh iteration of Abstract Expressionist sensibility. Her physically charged paintings, at once forceful and lyrical, recapture the spontaneity of Franz Kline, the vivid palette of de Kooning and Richter, the intense often disquieting visual poetry of Joan Mitchell and Frank Auerbach.

For Ansel,the act of painting represents an alternative way of seeing, allowing her to engage in an intimate dialogue with her source and to comprehend it on a more profound level. By translating her discoveries of spiritual intentions, psychological and emotional impact into abstraction, Ansel’s paintings succeed in capturing glimpses of the original content. As a result, her works not only serve as a point of departure from the Old Master context, but also as a celebration of [its] values, knowledge and techniques….