Untitled

Description

In July 1943, Arshile Gorky vacationed in the foothills of the Appalachians, at the Virginia farm of his wife’s parents. There he devoted himself to drawing outdoors, developing a vocabulary of leaf, seed, and pod shapes from the lush mid-summer landscape. Drawn with obvious passion, this work, with its essentially joyous riot of color, provides little indication of the suffering and despair of Gorky’s last years, which eventually caused him to take his own life.

Untitled

Arshile Gorky

1943

Accession Number

88645

Medium

Wax crayons and colored crayon and graphite with scraping and incising, on ivory wove paper

Dimensions

57.8 × 73.6 cm (22 13/16 × 29 in.)

Classification

crayon

Museum

The Art Institute of Chicago

Chicago, United States

Credit Line

Gift of the Joseph and Helen Regenstein Foundation, Peter B. Bensinger, Louis H. Silver, Joseph R. Shapiro, and the Ada Turnbull Hertle Fund