Arshile Gorky (1904-1948)
Property from the Collection of Harry W. and Mary Margaret Anderson
Arshile Gorky (1904-1948)

Untitled

Details
Arshile Gorky (1904-1948)
Untitled
signed and dated 'A Gorky 46' (lower right)
wax crayon and graphite on paper
19 1/8 x 24 7/8 in. (48.6 x 63.2 cm.)
Executed in 1946.
Provenance
Julien Levy, Bridgewater, Connecticut, 1958
William Copley, New York, circa 1966
His sale; Sotheby's, New York, 5 November 1979, lot 13
Harold Diamond, New York
Acquired from the above by the present owner, 1981
Literature
R. Reiff, "The Late Works of Arshile Gorky: A Critical Estimate," Art Journal 22, Spring 1963, pp. 148-152, fig. 4 (illustrated).
J. Levy, Arshile Gorky, New York, 1966, pl. 165 (illustrated).
R. Reiff, "Arshile Gorky's Object Matter," ARTS Magazine 50, March 1976, pp. 91-93 (illustrated).
W.C. Seitz, Abstract Expressionist Paining in America, Cambridge, 1983, p. 32, no. 77.
K. Baker, "Borrowed Glory," San Francisco Chronicle, 5 October 2000, p. E3.
Exhibited
New Haven, Yale University Art Gallery, Max Ernst and Arshile Gorky: From the Collection of Julien Levy, March-May 1964, no. 26.
College Park, University of Maryland, J. Millard Tawes Fine Arts Center, The Drawings of Arshile Gorky, March-April 1969, p. 54, no. 34.
New York, Washburn Gallery, Arshile Gorky, In Memory, November 1978, no. 11.
New York, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum; Dallas Museum of Art and Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Arshile Gorky 1904-1948: A Retrospective, April-July 1981, p. 242, no. 230 (illustrated).
Stanford University Museum of Art, Twentieth-Century Drawings from the Anderson Collection: Auguste Rodin to Elizabeth Murray, November 1988-February 1989, no. 19 (illustrated on the back cover).
Madrid, Sala de Exposiciones de la Fundación Caja de Pensiones and London, Whitechapel Art Gallery, Arshile Gorky, 1904-1948, October 1989-March 1990, pp. 150 and 193, no. 84 (illustrated).
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Celebrating Modern Art: The Anderson Collection, October 2000-January 2001, pp. 313 and 366, no. 101, pl. 177 (illustrated).
New York, Whitney Museum of American Art and Houston, The Menil Collection, Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective of Drawings, November 2003-February 2004, pp. 171 and 244, no. 94 (illustrated).
Philadelphia Museum of Art; London, Tate Modern and Los Angeles, Museum of Contemporary Art, Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective, October 2009-September 2010, p. 312, no. 151 (illustrated).
Anderson Collection at Stanford University, Salon Style: Collected Marks on Paper, March-August 2018.

Brought to you by

Emily Kaplan
Emily Kaplan

Lot Essay

This work is recorded in the Arshile Gorky Foundation Archives under number D1288.

Drawn in 1946, Arshile Gorky’s Untitled is an accomplished work on paper produced during one of the most important periods of the artist’s short, but fertile, career. The complex range of intertwined forms trace the physical movement of Gorky’s hand as it traverses across the surface of the paper, leaving an intricate trail of graphite and wax crayon marks. Out of this blend of form and line, quasi-figurative shapes begin to emerge as the artist melds together elements of abstraction and figuration into one enigmatic scene. Gorky was heavily influenced by Surrealism, along with the myths and traditions of his homeland in Armenia, and Untitled contains the same dreamlike nature that appears in his greatest works of art. Untitled has been included in several of the artist’s most important retrospectives, including the important 2003 exhibition Arshile Gorky: A Retrospective of Drawings organized by the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York.

Untitled comes with the distinguished provenance of having been in the personal collection of the celebrated dealer and author, Julian Levy. His eponymous gallery in New York served as an important venue for the Surrealists and other avant-garde artists in the 1930s and 1940s, and Levy also acted as Gorky’s dealer from 1944 until the artist’s sudden death in 1948. A ceaseless champion of Gorky’s work, Levy authored one of the first major monographs on the artist, published in 1968 and in which Untitled is illustrated. In his introduction, he summed up the richness and majesty of Gorky’s late drawings, and their pivotal place in the 20th century art historical canon. “In those short years from 1941 until…1948,” Levy wrote, “he achieved a critical mixture of form and abandon, tragedy and humor, ferocity and tenderness, organization and dream, abstraction and Surrealism, resulting in a series of drawings and paintings that announce greatness for the art of his century” (J. Levy, Arshile Gorky, New York, 1968, p. 10).

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