The authors draw an analogy between Pollock's drip technique and the artist's childhood experience of watching his father urinate on a rock.
In that space, he perfected his big "drip" technique of working with paint, with which he would become permanently identified.
Other influences on his drip technique include the Mexican muralists and Surrealist automatism.
Even if you think of his famous "drip" technique as something so simple a child could do it, his fame has been cemented in the American consciousness.
Working under her married name, Justine Wanger, she was part of the team that developed the modern intravenous drip technique.
Sources for the drip technique include Navaho sand painting.
The anecdote is used only to explore the psychological resonance of the drip technique, not its origin.
This style evolved into his drip technique.
This style includes works that range from Pollock's drip technique all the way to Tatlin's first mobile.
It includes an interesting historical curiosity: a collaborative painting by all three artists providing an early example of the drip technique that later made Pollock famous.