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Arshile Gorky's meander as a modern master

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  • Arshile Gorky's meander as a modern master

    Arshile Gorky's meander as a modern master
    Although the artist ripped off Cézanne and Picasso, he pioneered
    abstract expressionism with his luscious blob work
    (Hirshhorn Museum, Smithsonian Washington, Arshile Gorky Estate)
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    The Sunday Times/UK
    February 14, 2010

    Waldemar Januszczak

    Recommend?
    When I was a child, I was a sad little sod. Growing up in a Polish
    resettlement camp near Swindon, living in a Nissen hut surrounded by
    people who washed their dogs in the communal bath, nothing much gave
    me pleasure. Except Arshile Gorky.

    Chance brought him into my life. My mother would sometimes bring me
    back a magazine called Knowledge from the cleaning jobs she was doing,
    and this magazine always had in it a full-page reproduction of a
    painting. Once, it was El Greco's Saint Martin and the Beggar. Another
    time, Van Gogh's view of the night cafe at Arles. I cut them out and
    treasured them, and, later on, when we moved to Reading, I stuck them
    on the wall and stared at them for hours. The one I stared at the
    longest, because understanding it was an endless experience, was The
    Betrothal II, by Arshile Gorky.

    This gorgeous yellow painting, with its cascades of falling shapes,
    felt as if it was moving: trickling from top to bottom like the sand
    in an hourglass. So much was going on in it. Some of the busy coloured
    shapes were outlined in thin black lines, like the ones cartoonists
    use. And these cartoonish outlines gave the picture a Disneyish air,
    which took the sting out of its difficulty and made it easy for a
    child to love. I was six or seven, and knew nothing yet about abstract
    expressionism. But I learnt the picture's title, remembered its
    maker's name and am now delighted to see The Betrothal II lording it
    over the best room in Tate Modern's compelling Gorky show.

    Gorky, too, was a refugee. He was born Vosdanig Adoian in Turkish
    Armenia in about 1902. When the Turks sided with the Germans in the
    first world war and set about eradicating their Armenian population -
    the 20th century's first recorded act of genocide - Vosdanig fled to
    Russia, where his mother died of starvation. Somehow, he made his way
    to America, where his father had already decamped. And by the late
    1920s, he had turned himself into an artist and was calling himself
    Arshile Gorky.

    We encounter him here as a flagrant copyist, working in the manner of
    Cézanne. So outrageously Cézannish is his still life of apples and
    pears around a jug, the modern world would surely deem him guilty of
    copyright infringement. Even at his most Provençal, though, Gorky
    brings some Armenian blackness to his task. At the back of his early
    paintings, there is invariably a darkness, gathering like thunder on
    the horizon. In 1927, he painted a simple chair in a corner with a
    cloth draped over it. Then dramatically murdered its Cézannish air by
    placing a skull in the centre.

    The show spends a long time watching him find himself. The first five
    galleries are thick with borrowings. From Cézanne, he moved on to
    Picasso, whose assorted cubistic styles he mimics with endearing
    clumsiness. What Picasso achieved in moments with a few quick swishes
    of his brush, Gorky takes hours and days and months over, reworking
    layer upon layer, until he arrives at pictures as thick as roof
    insulation. It's as if a plasterer has taken up painting. Also
    borrowed from Picasso, I suggest, is an insouciance about skipping
    from abstraction to figuration. Later in art history, when the divides
    hardened, artists would come to blows over such matters. Here, having
    watched Gorky struggle to paint his clunky cubistic abstracts, we
    suddenly find him standing next to his mother in an entirely
    figurative room filled with memories.

    There are two versions of The Artist and His Mother. Both took a
    decade or more to paint, between 1926 and 1942. Both were based on the
    same childhood photograph. The artist, as a boy of 9 or 10, stands
    next to his mother, who is seated sternly like an enthroned Madonna in
    a romanesque carving, her lovely face framed with a headscarf that
    seems to emphasise her saint - liness. Once again, you can smell Picasso
    in the room - in the beautiful rose colours of one of the versions and
    the sculptural primitivism of the other - but the voice we are
    listening to is, at last, the real Gorky's.

    It was in the early 1940s that he finally found himself. Which was
    unusual. Indeed, among the giants of 20th-century art, it was unique.
    In Europe, the war was absorbing the energy of an entire artistic
    generation, and it wasn't the time for personal growth. Yet for Gorky,
    exiled in America, the war seemed to reconnect him with his lost past.
    The first painting here that is unmistakably a Gorky, unmistakably
    beautiful and unmistakably a masterpiece, is also the first that
    refers directly to his Armenian origins. Painted in 1940-42 and called
    After Khorkom, this brightly coloured choir of blobs is scattered
    vividly with poppy reds and buttercup yellows. Khorkom was the village
    in which Gorky was born. The 1940s was when it all happened for him.
    He met his second wife, and, since he was 39 and she was 19, we can
    surely imagine some of the reasons for the new spring in his step. The
    wife had family in Virginia, and for the first time Gorky found
    himself driving across the changing landscape of America, enjoying its
    tangled rhythms and allowing them to throb in him.

    In art, meanwhile, having absorbed a fully imaginary Cézanne and
    Picasso, he found himself coming into real-life contact with exiled
    surrealists from Europe, and his allegiances switched. It happened
    overnight. One moment he was working laboriously with thick
    encrustations of paint, the next he was skimming his canvases with
    coloured washes and skipping round them with quick black outlines. The
    zippy cartoon line work does not come from Disney after all. It comes
    from Miro. The rooms ahead are filled, gloriously, with masterclasses
    in pioneering abstract expressionism. Every picture is an event, as
    busy clusters of blobs - some reminiscent of human dangly bits, others
    of tangled forms from the American landscape - shove, slide and
    trampoline across throbbing expanses of foggy colour. Something about
    the relationship of these blobs to their backgrounds reminded me of
    the relationship between cactuses and deserts; or plants and their
    beds. But, since we are watching the influence of surrealism here, we
    need to suspect psychological origins as well for the luscious blob
    work: in dreams, thoughts, remembrances.

    As Gorky's art blossomed, so his life, alas, began curling up and
    dying. In 1946, a fire in his studio destroyed 20 paintings. He got
    cancer. His marriage broke up. His neck was broken in a car crash and
    he found he could no longer paint. Eventually, after trying to hang
    himself from various trees, he successfully committed suicide in 1948.
    A life that had meandered its way to success so slowly plummeted to
    its conclusion like a falling piano. As for The Betrothal II, it is
    even more beautiful in the flesh than the beautiful memory I have of
    it.

    Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective is at Tate Modern, SE1, until May 3
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