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Arshile Gorky's Drawings And Paintings Exhibition At The Whistler Ho

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  • Arshile Gorky's Drawings And Paintings Exhibition At The Whistler Ho

    ARSHILE GORKY'S DRAWINGS AND PAINTINGS EXHIBITION AT THE WHISTLER HOUSE MUSEUM OF ART

    AZG DAILY
    17-09-2009

    Culture

    This fall, the Whistler House Museum of Art will premiere a special
    exhibition by the internationally acclaimed artist, Arshile Gorky (1904
    - 1948), known to be the Father of American Abstract Expressionism.

    The exhibit, entitled Drawings and Paintings by Arshile Gorky -
    Mina Boehm Metzger Collection, is named after a friend, patron and
    student of Gorky's. It presents 28 never-before-seen and rarely
    seen works of art and will be exhibited in the museum's Parker
    Gallery. The collection is significant in that it presents many
    of Gorky's earlier works and traces his progression as an artist,
    featuring the influence of such well-respected painters such as Paul
    Cezanne, Joan Miro and Pablo Picasso. Included in this collection,
    which is made up of drawings and paintings, is the only surviving
    stone sculpture executed by the artist.

    As part of its permanent collection, the Whistler House Museum of
    Art owns one of Gorky's few remaining works of the time, Park Street
    Church, Boston (1924), which was painted in a Post-Impressionistic
    style and has been exhibited at many museums, including the Smithsonian
    and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum.

    An Armenian immigrant, Vosdanig Monoog Adoian, (better known as
    Arshile Gorky) was born in the village of Khorkom on Lake Van, in
    the Van Province of Armenia, on April 15, 1904. As a child, Gorky
    survived the genocide of the Armenian people by the Ottoman Turks.

    While escaping to Russian-controlled Armenia, his family of three
    sisters and his parents were displaced and dispersed. Leaving his
    family behind, his father escaped the Turkish military draft by moving
    to the United States and settling in Providence, Rhode Island.

    In 1919, during a forced march in Yerevan, his mother died of
    starvation in Gorky's arms. (Her memory inspired a series of
    portraits.) In 1920, at the age of sixteen, leaving behind the
    war-ridden territory of the collapsed Russian empire, Gorky arrived at
    Ellis Island and then joined his father. He spent his early years in
    the United States in Providence, Rhode Island, Boston and Watertown,
    Massachusetts.

    Prior to immigrating to the United States, Arshile Gorky was mainly a
    self-taught artist. Passionate about his Armenian heritage and love
    of art of the past, its shades were dominantly present in his work
    throughout his lifetime. In Boston, he enrolled in the New School
    of Design, which he attended from 1922 to 1924. During this period,
    Gorky was heavily influenced by the French Post-Impressionist painter,
    Paul Cezanne, who paved the way to Cubism. On moving to New York,
    sometime in 1925, he began to follow the contemporary artistic style of
    Pablo Picasso's Synthetic Cubism and the innovative style of Spanish
    Surrealist painter, Joan Miro.

    While in New York, Gorky began an artistic and personal friendship
    with such artists as Stuart Davis, John Graham and Willem de Kooning.

    He attended both the National Academy of Design and the Grand Central
    School of Art, where he also taught until 1931. It was at this time
    that he changed his name from Vosdanig Adoian to Arshile Gorky,
    claiming to be a relative of the prominent Soviet writer Maxim Gorky,
    who enjoyed considerable fame in the West. Seeking to make a name for
    himself in the art world, he felt justified in taking on a pseudonym,
    as did many of his colleagues of the time. He was determined to
    eventually reveal himself as an Armenian.

    Gorky's body of work is a unique combination of Surrealist, Cubist,
    and Expressionistic artistic styles, mastering each of the highly
    diverse styles with equal ease. By the 1940s he was known as a
    surrealist painter and is considered to be the important bridge and
    direct link between European Surrealists and US Abstract Surrealists.

    Gorky was one of the major forces behind the emergence of the Abstract
    Expressionist movement. It was a movement of artistic styles, during
    the mid 1940's, that involved complete freedom from all traditional
    aesthetic and social values. It combined abstract form and favored
    spontaneous, liberated personal expression.

    It is said to be America's most important contribution to
    Modernism. Gorky's work greatly influenced famous Abstract
    Expressionist such as Jackson Pollock, Franz Kline, Mark Rothko,
    and Willem De Kooning.

    The Mina Boehm Metzger Collection contains works that span his artistic
    career, showcasing Arshile Gorky as a seminal figure in the movement
    toward abstraction that ultimately transformed American art as we
    know it today. Along with museums all over the world, including the
    Tate Modern in London, his works can be found in most major American
    museums, including The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Museum of Modern
    Art, The Whitney Museum of American Art, and The Solomon R.Guggenheim
    Museum in New York City.

    Gorky was an enigmatic and intense character, but a man of great
    poetic spirit. Although achieving personal success and fame, his
    final years were full of melancholy, loneliness, and a yearning
    for his homeland of Armenia. At the height of his creative success,
    he experienced cancer, a failed marriage, a broken neck due to a car
    accident and a fire, which destroyed many of his new works. In 1948,
    at the age of 44, he committed suicide.

    Mina Boehm Metzger, for whom the collection was named, was born in
    1877 in Vienna, Austria, "under the American flag". Her father was an
    inventor who in his youth had explored the American west with Buffalo
    Bill. Later he became a noted architect in New York City where he
    headed up his own firm.

    In 1898, she married David Metzger, a young, successful New York
    business man, and the following year had twin daughters. For many
    years she led a busy life often accompanying her husband on business
    trips to Europe where she had the opportunity to visit many museums.

    This was the beginning of the stimulating age of Impressionism. These
    experiences left a lasting impression on her artistic spirit.

    Although she studied art as part of her early education, she did not
    have any formal training until the 1930s. In New York City, where
    Mina Boehm Metzger lived, the Grand Central Art School offered a
    class in beginning painting in which she enrolled. It was there that
    she met Arshile Gorky, the teacher. She was not only his student,
    but one of the first to recognize his genius. She and her husband
    became his patrons at a time when the aftermath of depression made
    life almost impossible for young artists.

    Metzger, along with her daughter, Margaret Vandercook, a sculptor,
    and Gorky had adjoining studios in Union Square in New York City. All
    three were part of the exciting art revival in New York at that time.

    The collection contains several important images of Metzger in the
    form of drawings.

    In October 2009, The Philadelphia Museum of Art will present a
    major retrospective exhibition on Gorky, entitled Arshile Gorky:
    A Retrospective . It will open in Philadelphia and travel to Los
    Angeles and London. It will be the first full-scale survey of Gorky's
    work since the retrospective held at the Solomon R.

    Guggenheim Museum, New York, in 1981. This occasion will introduce
    Gorky's work to a new generation of viewers, and for the artist's
    longtime admirers, will celebrate his singular importance within the
    history of art. The Whistler House Museum's Park Street Church, Boston
    (1924) will be a part of the important traveling exhibition.

    The Whistler House Museum of Art, located in Lowell, Massachusetts,
    is the historic birthplace of the famous American artist, James
    McNeill Whistler. Established in 1878, as the Lowell Art Association
    Inc., it is the oldest incorporated art association in the United
    States. It is known internationally for its distinguished collection
    of 19th and early 20th century New England representational art. The
    Whistler House hosts many exhibits, lectures, educational programs,
    concerts and an array of social events.
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