Lenore "Lee" Krasner was an American artist who garnered fame for her work involving abstract expressionism. She gained special recognition for her collages. Her marriage to Jackson Pollock eclipsed her accomplishment as an artist during her lifetime, but there was a significant amalgamation between their approaches to art. Krasner, whose style was influenced by the likes of George Bridgman and Hans Hofmann, was more structured between the two, particularly while painting human anatomy. On the other hand, Pollock’s method was more intuitive and unregulated. In the years they were together, each had a drastic effect on the other’s art. A New York native, Krasner went on to spend most of her life in various parts of the state. She always harboured a deep passion for art and started painting when she was a teenager. At present, she is considered a crucial transitional figure within abstraction who served as a link between the early-20th-century art and the new ideas of post-war America. Her paintings are now highly valued. Krasner has the distinction of being one of the handfuls of female artists to get a retrospective show at the Museum of Modern Art.