WHITNEY PRESENTS ARSHILE GORKY: A RETROSPECTIVE OF DRAWINGS
A seminal figure in the movement toward abstraction that ultimately
transformed American art, Arshile Gorky (1905-48) will be celebrated
as one of the outstanding draftsmen of the 20th century in
an exhibition opening in November at the Whitney Museum of
American Art.� Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective of Drawings,
on view from November 20, 2003, through February 15, 2004,
will examine the importance of Gorky's drawings in his development
as an artist and the evolution of his visual vocabulary and
style.� It will include 140 drawings, some previously unseen
by the public.� After its presentation at the Whitney, the
exhibition will travel to The Menil Collection in Houston.
"Gorky's intensely powerful drawings are pivotal to an understanding
of his art," said Maxwell L. Anderson, the Alice Pratt Brown
Director of the Whitney.� "We've had a long association
with Gorky, beginning with the purchase of a painting in 1937,
the first work of his acquired by a museum.� The Whitney
organized a memorial exhibition in 1951, a few years after
Gorky's tragic early death. We've done other Gorky exhibitions
as well and are very pleased to present the first major show
devoted exclusively to the artist's drawings.� Gorky's work
helped to revolutionize American art, and it continues to fascinate."
The exhibition is being curated by Janie C. Lee, adjunct curator
of drawings at the Whitney Museum, with Melvin P. Lader.� Mr.
Lader, a longtime Gorky scholar, is Professor of Art History
at George Washington University.�����
"Gorky's drawings are set apart by the graphic elegance and
forcefulness invested in them by the artist," said curator
Janie C. Lee. "This technically demanding medium taught Gorky
self-discipline and control, driving his visual inventiveness
to new heights."
About the Artist
Arshile Gorky (Vosdanik Adoian) was born in 1904 or 1905 (there
are differing accounts of the date) in the province of Van
in Armenia.� Following the massacre of the Armenians by the
Turks in 1915, the scattering of his family, and the death
of his young mother from starvation, Gorky immigrated to the
United States in 1920.� It was here that he took the name Arshile
Gorky and invented a new life for himself.
After arriving at Ellis Island, he moved for a brief time
to New England to live with relatives.� In 1924 he came to
New York and began to study art.� He was quickly made an art
instructor and taught for years in order to survive as an artist.� Throughout
the late 1920s and thereafter, Gorky met and became friends
with a great many artists, among them Stuart Davis, John Graham,
Willem de Kooning, David Smith, and Isamu Noguchi.
In the 1930s and early 1940s, Gorky's position within the
New York art scene brought him into contact with some of the
Surrealists who had been forced to flee Europe during the Second
World War. His friendship with the Surrealist poet Andr� Breton,
who greatly believed in Gorky's work, made a deep impression.� Gorky's
friendship with the Chilean-born artist Matta also contributed
to the development of his mature style.� Matta encouraged Gorky
to improvise and experiment more on paper, introducing him
to the Surrealist technique of automatic drawing.
The critic Harold Rosenberg noted that Gorky, "a lifelong
student, was an intellectual to the roots; he lived in an aura
of words and concepts, almost as much at home in the library
as in the museum and gallery."� New York City gave Gorky
the culture he craved, and the Surrealists gave him their encouragement
and a fluidity of line that was to carry him toward the achievement
of his own personal abstraction.
Gorky's artistic development can be defined in part by the
transitions between rural and urban environments that marked
the turning points in his life. Gorky's experience would greatly
alter and expand in the early 1940s with his exposure to rural
America. This began with his marriage in 1941 to Agnes Magruder,
always called by Gorky (and later by others) Mougouch, an Armenian
term of endearment. The parents of his new wife had a farm
in Virginia, and over the next seven years, Gorky came to spend
time in the countryside there, and later in Connecticut as
well. The support of a wife and family (their first daughter,
Maro, was born in l943, followed by a second, Natasha, in 1945)
led to a tremendous increase in his productivity as an artist.
In the many landscapes Gorky produced in Virginia in the early
1940s, his abstract vocabulary came to embrace natural and
organic forms. His method was to take home the drawings that
he made in the fields and draw repetitions of them, exploring
multiple variations of each image. These repetitions enabled
him to ingest new ideas gained outdoors until they became an
integral part of his formal vocabulary. Meyer Schapiro, in
his introduction to Ethel Schwabacher's monograph on Gorky,
said that after discerning "the vague, unstable image-space
of the day-dreaming mind," Gorky detached color from drawn
line, making line and color two different components in the
picture.� Gorky's drawings from this time also gave the artist
a chance to experiment and develop new techniques. He washed
them in his bathtub, hung them up to dry, and later scraped
or sanded the surface. In part, this new experimentation with
surfaces was intended to further alter the recognizable identity
of an image through the elimination of specific botanical or
biological details.
The swelling, rounded forms found in the late drawings, which
abruptly collapse into curving and folded planes suggestive
of leaves, petals, or grass, have convinced many commentators
that Gorky's imagery must have a basis in natural forms. Interpretations
differ as to the source of these forms: some believe Gorky's
inventions were inspired by plants and insects that he observed
during his walks in the countryside, while others claim that
these images recall genitals or viscera and must have welled
up from Gorky's subconscious fantasies. Perhaps it is only
with the help of Breton's theory of Surrealism, with its characterization
of nature as an abstract or symbolic language, that we can
begin to understand the significance of Gorky's unique style
of abstraction.�
Gorky at the Whitney Museum
The Whitney has long had an interest in the art of Arshile
Gorky, and began showing his work in the 1930s.� In 1951 the
Whitney organized Arshile Gorky Memorial Exhibition,
which traveled to the Walker Art Center and the San Francisco
Museum of Art.� The museum owns eleven works by Gorky.� The
Whitney has also amassed significant archival holdings of various
materials on Gorky's life and work.�
Arshile Gorky: A Restrospective of Drawings has been
made possible by support from the Leonard and Evelyn Lauder
Foundation, Thomas H. Lee and Ann G. Tenenbaum, Aaron I. Fleischman,
and the National Committee of the Whitney Museum of American
Art.
Catalogue
The accompanying publication will examine the evolution of
the artist's visual vocabulary and style through his drawings
and will illuminate his subtle changes in motifs from one version
of a theme to another, and the gradual metamorphosis of a form
from identifiable object or detail to abstract image over periods
of time, enhancing understanding of Gorky's working method.� The
book will also explore, through several of Gorky's drawings
from the 1940s, the artist's precise and conscious methodology
and differentiate his approach from the spontaneous and direct
execution generally associated with Abstract Expressionism.�
While the majority of Gorky scholarship has tended to present
biographical overviews of his career, the catalogue will focus specifically
on his drawings, thereby providing fresh insights into this
integral component of his work.� It will be the first retrospective
catalogue solely devoted to Gorky's drawings.� Essays by the
show's co-curators, Janie C. Lee and Melvin P. Lader, will
frame the drawings within a comprehensive overview of Gorky's
life, contemporaries, aesthetic influences, and artistic evolution.� The
catalogue will also contain a foreword by Whitney Director
Maxwell L. Anderson. |