User:Yerevantsi/sandbox/Arshile

The Artist and His Mother
ArtistArshile Gorky
Year1926–c. 1936
MediumOil on canvas
MovementAbstract expressionism
Dimensions152.4 cm × 127.6 cm (60.0 in × 50.2 in)
Location1) Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
2) National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.

The Artist and His Mother is the name of two oil-on-canvas paintings by Armenian-American artist Arshile Gorky created during a period of around a decade, from 1926 to 1936.


Background edit

In 1908, his father fled to the United States to avoid the Turkish draft and its policy of using Armenians to kill other Armenians. In 1915, when a new wave of massacres threatened Armenians, Shushan Adoian and her two younger children found refuge in “Caucasian Armenia.” Shushan, Gorky’s mother, Vartoosh, his sister and young Vosdanig (called, Manouk) moved from place to place. In 1919, while in Yerevan, Shushan fell gravely ill and died of starvation [Armenia was stricken with famine in the early years of the republic] even though Vosdanig and Vartoosh worked hard to bring food to her. [1]


Description edit

[2]

The Artist and His Mother, on which the painter worked for ten years (1926-36), is linked to Picasso's classical style of the early 2o's, though it manages at the same time to be highly personal, grave, passionately felt and, in spirit, some way between an icon and the old, faded photograph on which it was based. The colouring of this portrait, and other less successful essays in the same style, is both curious and attractive. They are all carried out in pale, chalky, muffled pastel tones, with the lightest of pinks, washed-out orange, and bleached browns and greens.[3]

"haunting paintings"[4]

Byzantine icon[5]


Second variant edit

National Gallery of Art [6]


Reception edit

Art journalist Linda Yablonsky described it as a "powerful picture of loss" in The New York Times.[7]

This is one of the most distressing and powerful of portraits[8]

Shushan der Marderosian, mother[8]

Cultural references edit


raw edit

[8] [8] [8]

https://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/28/arts/art-review-arshile-gorky-poet-of-line-and-color.html?searchResultPosition=640 The show presents his drawings for paintings based on a photograph of himself and his mother taken by a studio photographer in Van. The photograph was to be sent to his father, a reminder, in case he had forgotten, that his family still existed. Shushan stares vacantly at the camera, as if already departed from the world. Gorky stands beside her, feet primly together, a little boy unsmilingly proffering a small bouquet to his long-lost parent. Gorky tried two different versions for his own expression in the drawings, one glaring, the other downcast, while his mother stays the same, frozen in time, profoundly beautiful and sad, as he wished for her to remain in his memory.

https://www.nytimes.com/2002/04/12/arts/art-review-suspended-between-modernism-and-an-armenian-past.html?searchResultPosition=372 Arshile Gorky: Portraits at Gagosian Gallery is the first show ever devoted to the artist's portraiture, which seems surprising. One of Gorky's most familiar and defining paintings is an image of himself at 8 standing beside his mother. It's based on a 1912 photograph taken in Armenia, where he was born, a few years before his mother died, under terrible circumstances.

about the Armenian Genocide, how the trauma of the events never left the young Vostanig Adoian — especially the death of his mother, in his arms, from starvation. Most people are acquainted with the famous painting of the young Vostanig standing beside his seated mother. Actually, there are two such paintings and, though rarely seen together, both are on display. And, as a bonus, there is a copy of the photo from which the paintings were made — probably the first time all three have been seen together. The photo was taken in Van and sent to his father who had left their home, earlier, and had gone to Boston. Later, the young Gorky was to visit his father in Boston and found the photo. What is so poignant about the two paintings is that they were never “finished” — especially his mother’s hands. To have done so, we are told, would have meant the final death of his mother.[13]

both versions of The Artist and his Mother, an image that distils the experience of the millions of immigrants who made their way from the old world to the new in the early years of the past century. Based on a black-and-white studio photograph taken in Armenia in 1912, it shows Manoug and his mother posing stiffly in front of the camera like figures in a Byzantine icon. The little boy stands like a bridegroom at his mother’s side, wearing a coat with a velvet collar and shyly holding a bouquet of flowers. Seated next to him, monumental as a Madonna by Giotto, his mother wears the traditional Armenian head scarf and long apron. His round eyes look out pleadingly, hers are full of accusation.[14]

The young Gorky stands earnestly next to his beautiful, spectral mother, both of them unaware of the imminent tragedy. The painting serves as a haunting memorial to the Armenian genocide and in a cathartic way, brings his mother back from annihilation.[15]


rest edit

Gotthardt, Alexxa (6 November 2017). "What You Need to Know about Arshile Gorky, the Last Surrealist and the First Abstract Expressionist". Artsy. Archived from the original on 28 July 2023.

Cotter, Holland (April 12, 2002). "ART REVIEW; Suspended Between Modernism and an Armenian Past". The New York Times.

Birchenough, Tom (2013). "Arshile Gorky: A Summation Too Soon". Tretyakov Gallery Magazine. Tretyakov Gallery. (archived)

Voves, Ed (9 November 2009). "Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective at the Philadelphia Museum of Art". California Literary Review. Archived from the original on 28 July 2023.

Goldman, Edward (July 18, 2012). "Paul Schimmel Vs. Goliath". HuffPost. Archived from the original on 3 June 2023.

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9907EEDA143FEF3BBC4053DFB4678388679EDE&nytmobile=0&legacy=true

https://www.arshilegorkyfoundation.org/artist#tab:thumbnails

Psychiatry edit

References edit

  1. ^ Karakashian, Meliné (18 November 2016). "In Search of Gorky's Grave". Armenian Weekly.
  2. ^ "The Artist and His Mother". Whitney Museum of American Art.
  3. ^ Roberts, Keith (May 1965). "Current and Forthcoming Exhibitions: London". The Burlington Magazine. 107 (746): 270.
  4. ^ "Tate displays Arshile Gorky art remembering his mother". London Evening Standard. 9 February 2010.
  5. ^ Wullschlager, Jackie [in German] (12 February 2010). "Arshile Gorky at Tate Modern". Financial Times. Stark as a Byzantine icon, "The Artist and his Mother" illuminates this entire show.
  6. ^ "The Artist and His Mother". National Gallery of Art.
  7. ^ Yablonsky, Linda (9 February 2011). "Francesco Vezzoli's Temple of Obsession". The New York Times.
  8. ^ a b c d e Jones, Jonathan (30 March 2002). "The Artist and His Mother, Arshile Gorky (c1926)". The Guardian.
  9. ^ Daldal, Aslı (2007). "Ararat and the politics of 'preserving' denial". Patterns of Prejudice. 41 (5): 407–434. doi:10.1080/00313220701657245.
  10. ^ Kennedy, Randy (27 July 2006). "Guggenheim Study Suggests Arts Education Benefits Literacy Skills". The New York Times.
  11. ^ "Arshile Gorky: Djivan Gasparyan / Richard Hagopian / The Shoghaken Ensemble". AllMusic. Archived from the original on 28 July 2023.
  12. ^ "Armenian Experience, The: From Ancient Times To Independence". naasr.org. National Association for Armenian Studies and Research. Archived from the original on 27 July 2023.
  13. ^ Kevorkian, Andrew (24 June 2010). "Reflecting on Arshile Gorky's Retrospective at Philadelphia's Museum of Art". Ararat Magazine. Armenian General Benevolent Union. (archived)
  14. ^ Dorment, Richard (8 February 2010). "Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective at Tate Modern, review". The Daily Telegraph. (archived)
  15. ^ Brewer, Kirstie (31 March 2010). "Sublime art transcends life of tortured genius Arshile Gorky in moving Retrospective at Tate Modern". Culture24.