This week’s Modern Art Notes Podcast features Paul Schimmel, the former chief curator of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and the curator of the new MOCA exhibition “Destroy the Picture: Painting the Void, 1949-1962.” The show is accompanied by a fascinating catalogue.

Schimmel’s exhibition examines the way artists responded to the unprecedented killing and destruction of World War II by (often) literally attacking the picture plane. The show, which features 26 artists (but only three Americans) charts the way artists used abstraction to respond to a post-atomic world, and in so doing offers an alternate history about post-abstract expressionism abstract art.

This image is of a work by Gutai artist Saburo Murakami. It features paint literally blistering off the surface of the canvas, an acute reference to Japanese war-time experiences.

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Image: Saburo Murakami, Work [Peeling Picture] (detail), 1957. Collection of the Vervoordt Foundation, Belgium.