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Art: Arshile Gorky: Art and Anguish

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  • Art: Arshile Gorky: Art and Anguish

    Philadelphia Inquirer
    Oct 25 2009


    Art: Arshile Gorky: Art and Anguish
    The powerful paintings from a brilliant, brief life form a masterful,
    must-see exhibit at the Art Museum.
    By Edward Sozanski

    Contributing Art Critic

    Make the strongest effort to see the spectacular Arshile Gorky
    exhibition at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Not only does it contain
    an abundance of powerful, lyrical abstract painting, it tells a
    poignant and ultimately tragic story of how a poor, proud immigrant
    methodically and diligently transformed himself into one of the most
    influential artists of the last century.

    Gorky's transformative role in American modernist art became obscured
    by the subsequent celebrity of the abstract expressionists and then
    the pop generation. This magisterial retrospective restores historical
    balance through a body of work that's both formally stunning and
    suffused with emotion.

    Everyone enjoys colorful stories about tortured artists like Vincent
    van Gogh, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, and Jackson Pollock. But when it
    comes to a compelling life story at Hollywood scale, no artist tops
    Gorky.

    That wasn't his real name; he was born Vosdanig Adoian about 1902 in a
    town near Lake Van, the heart of the historical Armenian homeland in
    eastern Anatolia.

    In 1906, his father left for America, and thereafter had little
    contact with his wife and children. In 1915, the event known as the
    Armenian Genocide forced young Vosdanig and his mother to become
    refugees. Four years later, his mother, whom the artist subsequently
    memorialized in two iconic paintings, died of starvation.

    Vosdanig and a younger sister emigrated to the United States in 1920.
    Shortly thereafter, he changed his name to Arshile (possibly a version
    of Achilles) Gorky, reportedly a tribute to the Russian writer Maxim
    Gorky, who supported Armenian nationalism.

    After moving to New York in 1924, Gorky methodically schooled himself
    in art history by reading and visiting museums. With very little
    formal art training, he taught himself to be a modernist painter by
    absorbing, through mimesis, the techniques of other artists,
    particularly Paul Cezanne and Pablo Picasso.

    By the 1930s, he was reasonably proficient in the modernist idiom,
    thanks also to the influence of Henri Matisse, Joan Miró, Piet
    Mondrian, and his American friend Stuart Davis. He didn't become an
    original, authentic voice until the early 1940s, when two
    circumstances provoked a dramatic transformation in his style.

    The first was his marriage in 1941 to young Agnes Magruder, whom he
    called Mougouch. Her parents owned a farm in Virginia, where Gorky,
    till then a city-bound Manhattanite, discovered nature - or, rather,
    rediscovered what he had experienced on his father's farm in Turkish
    Armenia.

    The second stimulus, which reinforced the first, was his encounters
    with leading European surrealists and his inclusion in two important
    surrealist exhibitions.

    This synergy resulted in the paintings, created over perhaps six or
    seven years, that represent his legacy. Sadly, a series of tragedies
    stifled his career just as he reached the pinnacle.

    In early 1946, his Connecticut studio burned, destroying a number of
    paintings. Two months later he was diagnosed with rectal cancer, which
    was treated surgically.

    Then, in the summer of 1948, further catastrophe descended. His wife
    had a brief affair with his friend and fellow painter Roberto Matta.
    His neck was broken in an automobile accident. His wife left him,
    taking their two children. In mid-July, he hanged himself. He was only
    46.

    Such a biography quickly metamorphoses into legend. Yet ultimately we
    want to know, does his art transcend the soap-opera pathos of his
    life?

    The answer, as Art Museum curator Michael R. Taylor demonstrates
    brilliantly in this masterly exhibition, is that Gorky is bigger than
    his tragic story. Not only the later paintings, monumentally composed
    and lushly colored, but his drawings, similarly intricate and
    precisely calculated, reveal an intuitive, finely honed, and
    persistent artistic intelligence.

    At nearly 180 oils and drawings, this is a large, dense, and at times
    emotionally febrile collection - too much for one viewing. Plan at
    least two visits. It covers Gorky from alpha - a 1924
    impressionist-style study of a Boston church - to omega, the aptly
    titled Last Painting of 1948, which is unfinished.

    Thankfully, Taylor doesn't dwell on Gorky's prolonged infatuation with
    Cezanne or his later tutorial with Picasso. Some critics have cited
    both these phases as evidence that Gorky was essentially a pasticheur,
    but when this early work is considered in the context of the whole
    career, that accusation doesn't hold up: He was simply following the
    example of countless generations of artists who liberated their
    individuality by dissecting the work of established masters.

    Once past the 1920s, when Gorky was still absorbing and experimenting,
    the show breaks into two general sections. In the first, the 1930s,
    Gorky is painting structurally. He's still influenced by cubism and,
    in paintings such as Organization and the Newark Airport murals (two
    of the original 10 are on view), also by Mondrian. The paintings tend
    to be linear, geometric, and heavily worked; some surfaces are
    stuccolike. Picasso's presence is palpable.

    One senses that these works do not express either Gorky's experience
    or his essential spirit, that they are formal responses to, or
    variations on, what his contemporaries in New York are doing.

    Two paintings, perhaps his most familiar because they're figurative,
    diverge from this practice. Made from a 1912 photograph, they depict
    young Vosdanig standing next to his seated mother. Gorky has pushed
    beyond mere transcription of a neutral document to a profoundly sad
    evocation of a fractured family and a lost culture.

    The inner Gorky begins to emerge in a series of paintings called
    Garden in Sochi (a city in the Crimea) made in 1940-43. Despite their
    title, part of Gorky's adopted Russian facade, these paintings refer
    to his father's garden in Armenia. Miró-esque biomorphic forms,
    precisely situated, have replaced Picassoid distortions.

    Garden in Sochi exposed the romantic surrealism that energizes Gorky's
    imagination; the paintings also suggest that work to follow will evoke
    Armenia, albeit in ways not obvious to most observers.

    His exposure to the rural Virginia landscape in the early 1940s
    produced the efflorescence on view in the show's largest gallery,
    devoted to work of the mid-1940s. This features a stunning suite of
    seven landscape drawings, all completely abstracted from nature. Gorky
    always could draw, but these works reveal how much thought and
    intensity he put into efforts that sometimes served, in an Old
    Masterish way, as studies for paintings.

    The full force of his creative ingenuity emerges in paintings such as
    One Year the Milkweed and Water of the Flowery Mill. The year 1944 is
    perhaps the apogee of Gorky's distinctive blend of surrealist form and
    natural content. His surrealism was rooted not in fantasy or dreams
    like that of Salvador Dalí or Max Ernst but in observation tempered by
    memory. It's not an alternative reality but a modified one.

    In the last several years of his truncated career, Gorky's paintings
    become more somber. The Charred Beloved pictures refer to the studio
    fire, while the elegiac Soft Night, which is dark green, and The Limit
    can be read as reflecting the deepening depression that led to his
    death. While quieter and less exuberant than paintings of a few years
    earlier, these are sublime evocations of a tragic view of existence.

    This retrospective, the first for Gorky in America since 1981,
    substantially enhanced my appreciation and understanding of this
    marvelous talent and conflicted soul. I hope it affects you similarly.


    Art: Gorky Apotheosis
    The Arshile Gorky retrospective continues at the Philadelphia Museum
    of Art, 26th Street and the Parkway, through Jan. 10. Hours are 10
    a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays and to 8:45 p.m. Fridays.
    Admission is $16 general, $14 for visitors 65 and older, and $12 for
    students with ID and visitors 13 to 18. Pay what you wish first Sunday
    of the month. Information: 215-763-8100, 215-684-7500 or
    www.philamuseum.org.

    http://www.philly.com/inq uirer/entertainment/20091025_Art__Arshile_Gorky_.h tml

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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