The studio where Jackson Pollock painted from 1946-1956 wslater sued by Lee Krasner from 1957-1984. Marks from her dynamic gestural canvases are visible on the walls. The floor on which Pollock creaded his poured paintings was covered in a 1953 renovation, preserving the colors and gestures from many of his most famous works. The covering was removed when the studio was opened to the public as a museum in 1988. Both artists' tools and materials are also on display.

Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center
830 Springs-Fireplace Road
East Hampton, NY 11937

The former home and studio of two of America’s foremost abstract painters, a National Historic Landmark, preserves the environment that inspired them and contains evidence of their creative processes. Wearing special padded slippers, visitors walk on the studio floor covered with the brilliant colors and rhythmic gestures found in Pollock’s masterpieces. On the studio walls, evidence of Krasner’s dynamic painting technique is visible.

Pollock and Krasner moved from New York City to East Hampton in 1945, just as New York was emerging as the center of vanguard art. Pollock was already acknowledged as a leader among the nascent Abstract Expressionists, but personal and professional pressures aggravated his emotional instability and problem-drinking. Krasner suggested they try country living temporarily, but Pollock decided the move should be permanent. The property, which overlooks Accabonac Creek in the hamlet of Springs, was originally a fisherman’s homestead. Soon after arriving, the newly-married artists had major breakthroughs, and both began to create allover abstract compositions inspired in part by their rural surroundings. In a converted storage barn, Pollock painted many of his most famous poured canvases, using liquid house paint to express what he described as “memories arrested in space” and “energy and motion made visible.” Nature-derived imagery is found in many of the paintings both artists created here, including Krasner’s The Seasons, Cobalt Night, and August Petals. Pollock’s Accabonac Creek and Sounds in the Grass series, as well as poured paintings like Sea Change, Summertime, and Ocean Greyness, reflect his subjective responses to natural phenomena. After Pollock was killed in an automobile accident in 1956, Krasner used the barn studio until her own death in 1984. There she painted her Earth Green and Night Journeys series, and made the colorful gestures that remain on the walls. Their home is maintained as Krasner left it, with all their furnishings and personal possessions, including their library and phonograph record collection. One original painting by Pollock and prints by both artists are on display, and two temporary exhibitions are presented each season.

Upcoming Events & Artist Opportunities: