Bradley Walker Tomlin (born August 19, 1899, Syracuse, New York, U.S.—died May 11, 1953, New York City) was an American artist whose paintings introduced an elegiac tone to post-World War II abstract art. Following a path independent from art-world trends, in the last five years of his life he produced a body of work notable for its great originality and depth of feeling.
During most of his career, Tomlin painted lyrical Cubist still lifes while teaching at Sarah Lawrence College in Bronxville, New York, and at assorted boys’ schools. In the mid-1940s, he was influenced by the Abstract Expressionist painter Adolph Gottlieb. Experimenting with the semiautomatic methods used by Gottlieb and many Abstract Expressionists, he created graceful works, such as Tension by Moonlight (1948), that reflect his interest in Japanese calligraphy. He soon regarded such aesthetic freedom with suspicion, however, and began to paint more premeditated pieces, such as Number 9: In Praise of Gertrude Stein (1950), in which calligraphic and typographic shapes form a floating, but controlled, network over the entire surface of the canvas. During the remaining years of his life, he produced many paintings in subtle variations of this style, imbuing all his works with a distinctive melancholy.