An appreciation blog for abstract art, in particular from the abstract expressionist school. Pollock, de Kooning, Hofmann, Frankenthaler, Riopelle, Gorky, et al. will be presented here. All rights reserved by the artists or their legal delegates.
Showing posts with label gorky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gorky. Show all posts
Thursday, August 25, 2011
Wednesday, June 22, 2011
Arshile Gorky - The Liver in the Cock's Comb, 1944
From Wikipedia: When Gorky showed his new work to André Breton in the 1940s, after seeing the new paintings and in particular The Liver is the Cock's Comb, Breton declared the painting to be "one of the most important paintings made in America" and he stated that Gorky was a Surrealist, which was Breton's highest compliment. The painting was shown in the Surrealists' final show at the Galerie Maeght in Paris in 1947.
Michael Auping, a curator at the Modern Art Museum in Fort Worth, saw in the work a "taut sexual drama" combined with nostalgic allusions to Gorky's Armenian past. The work in 1944 shows his emergence in the 1940s from the influence of Cézanne and Picasso into his own style, and is perhaps his greatest work. It is over six feet high and eight feet wide, depicting "an abstract landscape filled with watery plumes of semi-transparent color that coalesce around spiky, thornlike shapes, painted in thin, sharp black lines, as if to suggest beaks and claws."
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