Lot Essay
Milton Avery's work from the 1960s has the distinctive character of simplified forms and blocks of color that we have come to associate with the artist's mature paintings. In addition to their broad popular appeal, Avery's bold abstractions exerted a highly important influence on Post-War American painting and have been seen as critical forerunners to the works of Mark Rothko and Adolph Gottleib, among others, for their poetic display of color and use of form. Clement Greenberg even pronounced Avery the leader of a new artistic phase after the status of Abstract Expressionism was thrown into question after Jackson Pollock's death. Painted in 1963, the present painting Morning Talk, is a masterwork of this period.
Many scholars attribute the important characteristics of Avery's style to his professional affiliation with the gallery of Paul Rosenberg who exposed him to modern European artists and their abstract ideals. When Rosenberg arrived in America in 1940, he brought a cache of great works by important European artists, many of whom provided Avery with a new understanding of abstract representation.
Barbara Haskell discusses these influences, noting that "Rosenberg's proclivity for taut structure and architectonic solidity encouraged Avery to emphasize these aspects of his work. He replaced the brushy paint application and graphic detailing that had informed his previous efforts with denser more evenly modulated areas of flattened color contained with crisply delineated forms. The result was a more abstract interlocking of shapes and a shallower pictorial space than he had previously employed. Avery retained color as the primary vehicle of feeling and expression, but achieved a greater degree of abstraction by increasing the parity between recognizable forms and abstract shapes" ("Milton Avery: The Metaphysics of Color," Milton Avery: Paintings from the Collection of the Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase, New York, 1994, pp. 8-9).
In 1957 Avery's approach to painting evolved. The artist began to paint on larger canvases due to the influence of the paintings by Abstract Expressionists, "to create an image so large that it would take up the viewer's field of vision--and hence occupy the entire consciousness" (B. Haskell, Milton Avery, New York, 1982, p. 148). Along with the increased size of his canvases, Avery also intensified the abstraction in his works. Seen more frequently as Avery approached closer to his last years, the artist simplified colors and shapes as seen in Morning Talk, to lend to the quietude of his later works.
As typical of his style, the artist creates in Morning Talk a tension and balance through his selection of complimentary and contrasting colors and shapes. While he simplifies the scene to the broadest possible forms, he invigorates these shapes through his sophisticated use of variegated hues. Avery sets the cool yellow of the woman at right and the couch against the vibrant red of the woman's dress at left and the dark green chair she sits on. The shapes of color in the painting are balanced by the hard lines of the couch and table juxtaposed with the smooth, curving lines of the figures. This is accentuated by his placing an angular book next to a rounded cup on the table. Here, Avery uses blocks of color both as expression and as a way to modulate space as he suggests recession through the planes of color and their arrangement on the two-dimensional surface. In 1952 Avery discussed this use color, "I do not use linear perspective, but achieve depth by color--the function of one color with another. I strip the design to the essentials; the facts do not interest me as much as the essence of nature" (as quoted in R. Hobbs, Milton Avery: The Late Paintings, New York, 2001, p. 51).
In Morning Talk, Avery characteristically renders his figure through a strict, plastic two-dimensional design. By simplifying the woman and landscape, he invigorates these forms through his sophisticated use of highly saturated colors. Here, Avery uses blocks of color both as expression and as a way to modulate space, as he suggests recession through the planes of color and their arrangement on the two-dimensional surface. "There are hazards in this approach to the figure," writes Hilton Kramer, "but Avery has somehow side-stepped the greatest of these, namely, a sense of fixity that would deprive his figures of animation. The characteristic attitude of Avery's figures is one of relaxation and repose. His women--most of his figures are female--read, carry on conversation, talk on the telephone, lie on the beach, or sit around daydreaming. They project a presence that, however disinterested, is far removed from the pictorial stasis that the artist's method might seem to hold in store for them. The reason, of course, is that Avery's color imparts an emotional drama, a weight of emphasis and nuance, that recapitulates on the level of retinal sensation whatever graphic complexities have eliminated in the process" (Milton Avery: Paintings 1920-1960, New York, 1962, pp. 17-19).
Though Avery discounted the influence of Henri Matisse on his work, it seems undeniable that he was inspired by the French artist's use of broad, interlocking shapes to create depth and his preference for flat color over blended shades. Matisse described an approach to painting which could equally serve to define Avery's own technique: "Fit your parts into one another and build up your figures as a carpenter does a house. Everything must be constructed--built up of parts that make a unit." Matisse further states, "The mechanics of construction is the establishment of the oppositions which create the equilibrium of the directions" (as quoted in Milton Avery: The Late Paintings, pp. 50, 53). In Morning Talk, it seems Avery has assembled his composition according to this method.
Morning Talk is exemplary of Avery's later paintings and includes all of the hallmarks that are distinctive of the artist's works. Avery described his style, "I like to seize the one sharp instant in Nature, to imprison it by means of ordered shapes and space relationships. To this end I eliminate and simplify, leaving apparently nothing but color and pattern. I am not seeking pure abstraction; rather, the purity and essence of the idea-expressed in its simplest form" (as quoted in Milton Avery: The Late Paintings, p. 53). In its simple, abstracted form and broad swaths of luminous, nuanced color, Morning Talk is a testament to Avery's remarkable artistic legacy.
Many scholars attribute the important characteristics of Avery's style to his professional affiliation with the gallery of Paul Rosenberg who exposed him to modern European artists and their abstract ideals. When Rosenberg arrived in America in 1940, he brought a cache of great works by important European artists, many of whom provided Avery with a new understanding of abstract representation.
Barbara Haskell discusses these influences, noting that "Rosenberg's proclivity for taut structure and architectonic solidity encouraged Avery to emphasize these aspects of his work. He replaced the brushy paint application and graphic detailing that had informed his previous efforts with denser more evenly modulated areas of flattened color contained with crisply delineated forms. The result was a more abstract interlocking of shapes and a shallower pictorial space than he had previously employed. Avery retained color as the primary vehicle of feeling and expression, but achieved a greater degree of abstraction by increasing the parity between recognizable forms and abstract shapes" ("Milton Avery: The Metaphysics of Color," Milton Avery: Paintings from the Collection of the Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase, New York, 1994, pp. 8-9).
In 1957 Avery's approach to painting evolved. The artist began to paint on larger canvases due to the influence of the paintings by Abstract Expressionists, "to create an image so large that it would take up the viewer's field of vision--and hence occupy the entire consciousness" (B. Haskell, Milton Avery, New York, 1982, p. 148). Along with the increased size of his canvases, Avery also intensified the abstraction in his works. Seen more frequently as Avery approached closer to his last years, the artist simplified colors and shapes as seen in Morning Talk, to lend to the quietude of his later works.
As typical of his style, the artist creates in Morning Talk a tension and balance through his selection of complimentary and contrasting colors and shapes. While he simplifies the scene to the broadest possible forms, he invigorates these shapes through his sophisticated use of variegated hues. Avery sets the cool yellow of the woman at right and the couch against the vibrant red of the woman's dress at left and the dark green chair she sits on. The shapes of color in the painting are balanced by the hard lines of the couch and table juxtaposed with the smooth, curving lines of the figures. This is accentuated by his placing an angular book next to a rounded cup on the table. Here, Avery uses blocks of color both as expression and as a way to modulate space as he suggests recession through the planes of color and their arrangement on the two-dimensional surface. In 1952 Avery discussed this use color, "I do not use linear perspective, but achieve depth by color--the function of one color with another. I strip the design to the essentials; the facts do not interest me as much as the essence of nature" (as quoted in R. Hobbs, Milton Avery: The Late Paintings, New York, 2001, p. 51).
In Morning Talk, Avery characteristically renders his figure through a strict, plastic two-dimensional design. By simplifying the woman and landscape, he invigorates these forms through his sophisticated use of highly saturated colors. Here, Avery uses blocks of color both as expression and as a way to modulate space, as he suggests recession through the planes of color and their arrangement on the two-dimensional surface. "There are hazards in this approach to the figure," writes Hilton Kramer, "but Avery has somehow side-stepped the greatest of these, namely, a sense of fixity that would deprive his figures of animation. The characteristic attitude of Avery's figures is one of relaxation and repose. His women--most of his figures are female--read, carry on conversation, talk on the telephone, lie on the beach, or sit around daydreaming. They project a presence that, however disinterested, is far removed from the pictorial stasis that the artist's method might seem to hold in store for them. The reason, of course, is that Avery's color imparts an emotional drama, a weight of emphasis and nuance, that recapitulates on the level of retinal sensation whatever graphic complexities have eliminated in the process" (Milton Avery: Paintings 1920-1960, New York, 1962, pp. 17-19).
Though Avery discounted the influence of Henri Matisse on his work, it seems undeniable that he was inspired by the French artist's use of broad, interlocking shapes to create depth and his preference for flat color over blended shades. Matisse described an approach to painting which could equally serve to define Avery's own technique: "Fit your parts into one another and build up your figures as a carpenter does a house. Everything must be constructed--built up of parts that make a unit." Matisse further states, "The mechanics of construction is the establishment of the oppositions which create the equilibrium of the directions" (as quoted in Milton Avery: The Late Paintings, pp. 50, 53). In Morning Talk, it seems Avery has assembled his composition according to this method.
Morning Talk is exemplary of Avery's later paintings and includes all of the hallmarks that are distinctive of the artist's works. Avery described his style, "I like to seize the one sharp instant in Nature, to imprison it by means of ordered shapes and space relationships. To this end I eliminate and simplify, leaving apparently nothing but color and pattern. I am not seeking pure abstraction; rather, the purity and essence of the idea-expressed in its simplest form" (as quoted in Milton Avery: The Late Paintings, p. 53). In its simple, abstracted form and broad swaths of luminous, nuanced color, Morning Talk is a testament to Avery's remarkable artistic legacy.