On view in our main gallery are selections from inventory and new acquisitions highlighting the various currents of painting and sculpture that emerged in New York immediately following the end of WWII. Included are a marvelous figurative canvas by Jack Tworkov, painted in 1949 at a time when he shared a studio with Willem De Kooning. Untitled, 1950 by Michael Goldberg showcases the artist’s bold, near calligraphic strokes bearing witness to the influence of both Willem de Kooning and Franz Kline. Robert Richenberg’s MOMA Collage, included in the Museum of Modern Art’s 1961 exhibition The Art of Collage, is a magnificent composition and stands as a stellar example of collage and assemblage of the period. Also included are a marvelous Self-Portrait by Larry Rivers painted in 1961, a welded composition from 1958 by Sidney Gordin, an intimate fabric collage by Conrad Marca-Relli, among others.