Alice Neel (1901-1984)
Alice Neel (1901-1984)

Portrait (Roberta Johnson Roensch)

Details
Alice Neel (1901-1984)
Portrait (Roberta Johnson Roensch)
oil on canvas
30 x 22 in. (76.2 x 55.9 cm.)
Painted circa 1943-1946.
Provenance
Acquired from the artist
By descent to the present owner

Lot Essay

Alice Neel painted the following two portraits of Mr. and Mrs. Roensch while she was living in Spanish Harlem, around the time of the Great Depression. In this era of her life, her subjects were friends and neighbors, most of them as modest as she was, acting as her pro-bono studio models.

These early portraits demonstrate a remarkable psychological intensity sympathetic with the reactionary charisma of Francis Picabia's portraits from the 1930's and 40's. Like the Spanish iconoclast, Neel was a courageous painter, showing little interest in pleasing either her subjects or the artistic order at the time. These two paintings are stunning examples of Neel's artistic development, marking the beginnings of her fearless career as one of the twentieth centuries most celebrated portraitists.

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