Hauser & Wirth opens an online exhibition featuring works by Arshile Gorky and Jack Whitten

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, April 19, 2024


Hauser & Wirth opens an online exhibition featuring works by Arshile Gorky and Jack Whitten
Arshile Gorky (1904 - 1948), Virginia Landscape, c. 1944. Pencil and crayon on paper, 47 x 60cm /18 ½ x 23 3⁄8 in. © (2019) The Arshile Gorky Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS). Courtesy The Arshile Gorky Foundation and Hauser & Wirth



NEW YORK, NY.- Arshile Gorky and Jack Whitten, two consummate master artists of the 20th century, are shown together in this online exhibition. The presentation was inspired by Whitten himself, who paid tribute to Gorky in a speech he gave in 2017. ‘Arshile Gorky was my first love in painting,’ he explained, ‘it was Gorky who first excited my imagination.’ Whitten described the experience of looking at Gorky’s work as, ‘witnessing something that comes from the deep soul of an artist.’

Belonging to different generations, each artist developed a highly individual visual vocabulary within their oeuvre. Gorky played a pivotal role in the shift to abstraction that transformed 20th-century American art, bridging surrealism and abstract expressionism. By absorbing and reacting to the work of ancient and past masters, as well as contemporary artists, he asserted his own understanding and imagination; a traditionalist sensibility in an American vanguard context. Whitten made it his mission to disrupt the discipline of art history through experiments with material, process, and technique. He effectively constructed a bridge between gestural abstraction and process art.

During Whitten’s intimate tribute he emphasized the soul, color, and profound mastery present in Gorky’s work and its resonance, explaining: ‘I too have suffered at the hands of man’s inhumanity to man. Gorky knew how, what this does of the psyche... I can read it in the color structure’. The connection between these two artists is poignantly revealed in this exhibition, through the final work created by Jack Whitten in 2017 before his passing in January 2018, a homage to Arshile Gorky. Titled ‘Quantum Wall, VIII (For Arshile Gorky, My First Love In Painting)’, the work is constituted by a colorful array of acrylic paint tiles that both physically and metaphorically reflect the light, sensibility, and impression Gorky’s work left on the artist’s mind and imagination.

Both Gorky and Whitten turned to the natural world for solace and inspiration, often employing landscape motifs to express underlying emotions. Gorky spent extended periods of time between 1943 and 1946 at Crooked Run Farm in Virginia, becoming enchanted by the bucolic surroundings, and his response began to manifest in his vibrant compositions. As he explained, ‘I do not paint in front of, but from within nature.’ The resulting works, including ‘Untitled’ drawings and ‘Virginia Landscape’ from 1944 – 1945, are filled with organic forms and infused with extraordinary expressive freedom, marking a profound reawakening of his connection to nature. In the last few years of his life, between 1946 – 1948, Gorky goes on to make arguably some of his most iconic works, such as the remarkable ‘Pastoral’ (1947), rediscovered in 2010, using gestural planes of color that give shape to the negative space and seeming to emerge from within the canvas. As well as his masterful ‘Gray Drawing for Pastoral’ (ca. 1946 – 1947), his instinctive symbols – still amorphous and suggestive – form a distinctive vocabulary comprising recurring forms.

Whitten absorbed the ancient landscapes of Crete; its colors and topographical viewpoints were expressed as elements in his art which he described as ‘structured feelings’. Whitten vividly described the impact on his senses: ‘Memory, both good and bad, is a powerful activator of emotion. The scent of fresh sawed pine logs, fresh sugarcane, mulberries, wild blackberries, huckleberries, plums, watermelons, persimmons, wild grapes and muscadine are all alive and active through sense memory’. In this vein, the exhibition displays Whitten’s ‘Garden in Bessemer VI’ (1968), directly influenced by Gorky’s ‘Garden in Sochi’ (1941), a work that signaled a shift in the use of acrylic paint as collage to create an almost geometrical view of nature.

The central role of Gorky’s draughtsmanship in his practice is exemplified in an early seminal work featured in the exhibition, ‘Untitled (Study for Mural),' executed in 1933 – 1934. A series of vignettes made up of abstract and figurative shapes and objects, the work is one of only three pen and ink drawings that the artist conceived. Over the course of his career, Whitten ceaselessly worked through a range of styles and techniques, experimenting continuously to arrive at a nuanced language of painting that hovers between mechanical automation and spiritual expression. In the 1970s, and visible in works such as ‘Steel City I,' Whitten began experimenting with mechanical automation, moving away from gestural mark-making.

Saskia Spender, President, and Parker Field, Managing Director, of The Arshile Gorky Foundation respond to the exhibition: 'A taste of Gorky vis-a-vis Whitten is timely and enticing. Harmonious in many respects, particularly in terms of palette and compositional structure, Gorky and Whitten were artists of many faces and styles. As we continue to appreciate their compositions side by side, we look forward to studying the nuanced consonance between the two artists' bodies of works. Occupying opposite halves of the 20th century, their kinship tells a compelling story of American art.'

Also responding to the exhibition, Mary Whitten says: 'To be able to see the love and admiration Jack had for Gorky, albeit on a digital screen, is a palpable connection between two artists at different ends of the 20th century. The call-and-response aspect of the paired landscapes almost speaking to one another is quite moving. I think as Jack grew older and dove deeper into his feelings, the beauty and sadness that runs through Gorky's oeuvre continued to inform Jack's expression.'

This exhibition precedes The Arshile Gorky Catalogue Raisonné, an invaluable web based resource presenting the first definitive record of Gorky’s complete production. The first installment will launch in early 2021, followed by further sections in subsequent months. As well as a forthcoming exhibition of rarely seen works by Jack Whitten at Hauser & Wirth Zürich, and the 2020 reissue by Hauser & Wirth Publishers of the seminal collection of the artist’s writings, ‘Jack Whitten: Notes from the Woodshed’ from 2018.










Today's News

May 21, 2020

Met museum in New York aims to open in mid-August after lockdown

An audience comes out of lockdown for Schubert and Mahler

Hauser & Wirth opens an online exhibition featuring works by Arshile Gorky and Jack Whitten

Authorities seek forfeiture of ancient Gilgamesh tablet from Hobby Lobby

Christie's announces online-only auction of Post-War and Contemporary art in Amsterdam

Findings made by British Museum archaeologists and scientists reveal that bitumen has been identified for the first time

Oscars may be postponed due to coronavirus: report

Christie's announces 'Out of Office: Art that Transports'

Matthew Marks presents first ever online exhibition of works by Robert Gober

Christie's presents an online private selling exhibition of American Illustration Art

Andréhn-Schiptjenko, Paris reopens with 'Tony Matelli: Abandon'

A timely tale accompanies the watch belonging to the Surgeon General who guided U.S. through 1918 pandemic

MacDougall's to offer an exceptional collection of Russian art of a European gentleman

Harvard Art Museums announce new tours of Painting Edo exhibition on Google Arts & Culture

Fine & Important Jewelry Auction achieves top results for Hindman Auctions

Christie's, Mark Seliger and RAD partner to raise funds for COVID-19 charities

Higher Pictures opens an online-only exhibition of works by Daniel Temkin

Satiricle ceramic works presented street-side from local artist Jennifer McCandless

Nevada Art Museum invests in Judy Chicago

Para Site opens international group show Garden of Six Seasons

Daylight Books publishes 'American Psyche: The Unlit Cave' by George Elsasser

Rothko Chapel reopening to take place September 12/13

Gold centerbowl once given to Queen Elizabeth II's grandparents boosts Heritage sale

12 Things You Want to Know About Piece Rate Compensation in California

Digitize Slides and Your Art Photography in 2020

Watching your children online

10 Types of Fine Art Pieces Curators Recommend

Naim Audio Active Ovator S-600 Loudspeaker: Can You Use it with Your Soundbar?

The Best Casino Architecture

The NBA's Most Valuable Players of all time

Candy: Exhibition brings together the work of the celebrated artists Damien Hirst and Felix Gonzalez-Torres

Business Growth Tips infographic by Hustler Alliance

Resin Bound Driveway Materials




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful