Lot Essay
The present work retains its original applied and painted border. As Charles Pietraszewski and Christine Conniff-O'Shea write, "Marin's frames and mounts are highly prized, possessing an almost cultlike status." Discussing a similar framing device on Movement No. 23--The Sea and Pertaining Thereto (1927, Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois), they describe, "Here the artist eschewed the gilded mount and applied a very thin raised silver strip around the edge of the watercolor, essentially creating another variation on his frame-within-a frame approach. In a letter to Stieglitz, he discussed this framing device: '[George] Of is at work on what I call my secondary line of defense or inner frames or strips...Figuring things out to the 32 of an inch is no joke but I want them to look right as I can make them--which of course takes time.'" ("Part of the Picture: The Power of the Frame in John Marin's Watercolors," John Marin's Watercolors: A Medium for Modernism, exhibition catalogue, Chicago, Illinois, 2010, pp. 59, 71)