Jackson Pollock's "No. 5, 1948"
* This abstract expressionist painting, also known as "Convergence," exemplifies the characteristics of amorphous art.
* Pollock's technique, known as "action painting" or "drip painting," involved pouring, dripping, and flinging paint onto a horizontal canvas.
* The result is a complex, chaotic, and intricate pattern of interlacing lines, splatters, and drips of paint.
* The painting lacks any recognizable forms or objects and instead creates an abstract composition of colors, textures, and rhythms.
* This type of amorphous art invites viewers to interpret and experience the emotions and sensations evoked by the abstract visual elements without the constraints of traditional representational art.