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PERSPECTIVE: Arshile Gorky Retrospective At The Philadelphia Museum

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  • PERSPECTIVE: Arshile Gorky Retrospective At The Philadelphia Museum

    PERSPECTIVE: ARSHILE GORKY RETROSPECTIVE AT THE PHILADELPHIA MUSEUM OF ART

    http://citypaper.net/blogs/criticalmass/2009/ 11/16/perspective_arshile_gorky/
    Philadelphia Citypaper -
    Nov 16 2009

    A retrospective exhibition should be more than just the collection
    and display of work from the lifetime of an artist. It should also be
    necessary in some way, whether due to changes in critical approaches to
    art history, new scholarship on the artist's life and work, hitherto
    unknown or unseen works that revise the existing inventory of the
    artist, or a new curatorial approach. "Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective,"
    at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, is an august example of a proper
    retrospective -- almost 30 years has elapsed since the last large
    gathering of Gorky's work, and it is clearly time for another look.

    Michael R. Taylor, the curator of the exhibition, never chooses his
    exhibitions lightly -- he is a curator and an art historian when
    he tackles his projects (this one was five years in the making). For
    Taylor, it's not just about looking at art; it's about asking questions
    that a retrospective can hopefully answer. With three new biographies
    about Gorky, as well as revisions to the study and understanding of the
    development of modern American abstraction and surrealism in recent
    decades, Taylor recognized that it was time to revisit the artist's
    life and work, and the show delivers grandly. It is a visual spectacle
    -- a feast for the eyes, and also a provocative reconsideration of one
    of the most talented and self-driven painters in American modern art.

    It's hard to go wrong with an artist like Gorky. His long periods
    of self-imposed apprenticeships with artists such as Cézanne and
    Picasso clearly paid off; his ability to absorb the modern languages
    of pictorial structure and the handling of paint and color stands
    out among his contemporaries. It's not that he is better -- he
    is different. I don't know of any other modern artist who enacted
    apprenticeships with recent and current "masters" and stayed closely
    dedicated to them for such long and intensive periods of study. Gorky
    works like an academic within a modern vocabulary, and Taylor's
    curatorial decisions expose his artistic process during the course of
    the exhibition. The drawings and paintings in the "Nighttime, Enigma,
    and Nostalgia" series from 1931-34, for example, guide viewers from an
    inspirational source by Giorgio de Chirico to a final painted solution
    unleashed almost entirely from where the artist began (observing this
    creative track should push aside any accusations by his detractors of
    a lack of individuality or originality in Gorky's "apprenticeships").

    It's obvious that Gorky's craft is a labor of love at all times. His
    work invites viewers to relish in the details -- the way he turns
    and molds colors together, builds edges, and gracefully drags a liner
    brush across the canvas with linear elegance. Gorky knows how to paint,
    and as a disciplined "student" his time was well spent.

    philamuseum.org Organization, by Arshile Gorky, oil on canvas, 1933-36.

    Add to this formal expertise a tale of personal struggle and
    contradictions -- the tragic death of his mother in his arms as a
    young boy in Armenia on a forced march during the Turkish genocide,
    the fabrication of an artistic pedigree that included a stint with
    Kandinsky in Paris, a changing of identity (his birth name was
    Vosdanig Adoian and he "became" Russian when he arrived in New York
    in 1924), and then a series of calamitous events involving betrayal,
    abandonment, personal injury and eventual suicide -- and there is
    a dramatic show in the making. But Taylor does not rest on Gorky's
    artistic and biographical laurels. Instead he brings forth new
    and challenging ideas about the artist, gleaned from research into
    archival materials and personal interviews with Gorky's relatives
    and friends. The catalog, a collection of essays by several authors,
    covers new scholarly ground -- exploring the artist's political
    leanings, the possibility that his masqueraded identity served as a
    coping mechanism for trauma and immigrant cultural adjustment, while
    also presenting new insights into his murals for the Newark airport in
    1936-37 and his methods of reaching a finalized painterly composition.

    The most significant contribution of the exhibition is Taylor's
    revisionist examination of Gorky's legacy within modern art. In short,
    he suggests that the posthumous writings emphasizing Gorky's importance
    to American abstract art overshadowed his continuing dedication
    to European surrealism. Publications that celebrated the artist's
    position as an "early master" of Abstract Expressionism, writings by
    American critics that attacked surrealism, the return of many of his
    surrealist friends to Europe, as well as later falsified letters by
    Gorky's nephew in which the "artist" disparaged surrealism and replaced
    its importance with a celebration of Armenian art, all contributed to
    Gorky being written into history without sufficient acknowledgement
    of his interest in and dedication to Breton's surrealism in the 1940s.

    philamuseum.org Central Park at Dusk, by Arshile Gorky, oil on canvas,
    1936-42 Taylor's view does not deny Gorky's important influence on
    the next generation of American painters. What it illustrates is
    that part of his artistic approach was unseen by artists and critics
    (namely his preparatory studies and drawings), and therefore what
    seemed like spontaneous acts of painting were in actuality more aligned
    with surrealist practices of automatism and even earlier academic art,
    where the final composition was transferred to the canvas only after
    the majority of formal issues were resolved. This artistic approach and
    his continued friendships with Breton and other surrealists during the
    1940s conflicts with the promotion of the artist as a proto-Abstract
    Expressionist by curators, critics and art historians in the decades
    immediately following his death. Taylor's critique of how Gorky
    has been written into American modern art history is polemical but
    convincing, and the evidence presented in the catalog is persuasive.

    The visual evidence for Taylor's claims is displayed in the largest
    room at the far back of the exhibition hall. The influence of Gorky's
    surrealist artist-friend Roberto Matta, who guided him into automatism
    and demonstrated how to thin paints to create spatial washes and
    expressive effects, combines with an immersion in nature that opens a
    wellspring in Gorky's art during the late 1930s and early 1940s. The
    focus on artistic inspiration through nature in the room reveals
    a psychic nostalgia via surrealism that carried Gorky back to the
    pre-tragic years of his childhood on his father's farm in Armenia. A
    series of drawings made in 1943 at his mother-in-law's rural home in
    Lincoln, Va., teem with energetic color and line and contain imagery
    that hovers somewhere between visible and intuitive perception. The
    decision to place this period of work, Gorky's best, in the farthest
    interior space makes curatorial sense, since the viewer then "turns
    back" into a second long series of rooms that lead through the work
    from the last years of the artist's life. Surrealism becomes the
    "pivot" in the exhibition, and the room containing the major works
    of the early 1940s elicits a world of colliding dualities: color and
    line, abstraction and visible subject matter, beauty in nature and
    destruction in war, and joy and despair in Gorky's personal life.

    Surrealism thrives on convulsive forces such as these, if an artist
    is able to reconcile them into a greater whole -- Gorky can, and did.

    philamuseum.org The Artist and His Mother, by Arshile Gorky, oil on
    canvas, 1926-36 At his public lecture, Taylor described a successful
    retrospective exhibition as one that unfolds like a drama through a
    series of acts.

    Could there be another artist more fitting for a Shakespearean tragedy
    than Arshile Gorky? Innocence, love, loss, struggle, betrayal, brief
    moments of elation -- it is all there. The PMA retrospective takes
    audiences on a curatorial journey in five acts: tragic beginnings in
    Armenia, pseudo-fathering through Cézanne, mentorship with Picasso,
    self-realization through Nature and Surrealism, and a tragic downfall
    that ends, as Shakespeare's works so often do, in the untimely death
    of the protagonist. Gorky's The Artist and His Mother is the great
    soliloquy in this tragedy, relegated (fittingly) to a tangential room
    in the early section of the exhibition. We exit the chronological
    narrative briefly and stand suspended in time in a chapel-like space,
    gaining privileged access to the private life and inner thoughts
    of an artist otherwise veiled by his fabricated public persona and
    abstract visual language. It seems impossible to imagine the power
    this image, based on a photograph taken seven years before the tragic
    loss of his mother, held for the artist. One drawing in particular,
    from the Art Institute of Chicago, employs subtle shifts in value with
    touches of thin but strong lines to evoke the return of his mother,
    and you sense that she is almost within reach. Gorky never stopped
    working on the images of his mother, as if doing so would somehow
    cause her to become a permanent part of his past. And while the elegant
    abstractions of the 1940s are for many historians unrivaled in modern
    art, observing the tender care and love imbued into these personal
    portraits is perhaps the most moving aspect of the entire exhibition.

    Like the famous soliloquy in Hamlet so crucial to the outcome of the
    tragic narrative, the face of the young boy holding a flower with
    his seated mother next to him remain vivid as one moves through the
    rest of the exhibition -- and the later works seem to make more sense
    for it. The Artist and his Mother is a fulcrum for the abstract work
    in the show, allowing access behind the formal walls of self-imposed
    "apprenticeships" and the veil of surrealist abstraction. It reveals
    much about the artist: complicated biographically, a private sufferer,
    strangely distant and inaccessible yet powerfully expressive through
    formal painting.

    The exhibition "curtain" closes with an uplifting testament to the
    artist's creative reach: a painting titled The Limit (1947). Although
    Gorky's last painting (found in progress on his easel when he took his
    own life in 1948) is seen nearby, this curatorial decision changes the
    tenor of the retrospective from a biographical journey to an artistic
    quest for continued innovation through disciplined painterly practice,
    even in the face of extreme personal hardship and physical anguish. A
    mysteriously liminal abstraction, The Limit suggests a doorway between
    the worlds of surrealist automatism and the growing abstract tendencies
    in the late 1940s in New York City. When Gorky discussed the painting
    with his dealer Julian Levy, he remarked that this was as far as he
    was going to push it. Without question, the PMA retrospective reveals
    that Gorky always pushed with great force, and even within a short
    career his contribution to modern art reached the edge of the possible.
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