Aaron Henry Gorson (1872-1933)
Aaron Henry Gorson (1872-1933)

Mill Along the River

细节
Aaron Henry Gorson (1872-1933)
Mill Along the River
signed 'AH Gorson' (lower left)
oil on canvas
13¾ x 20¾ in. (35 x 52.7 cm.)
来源
Spanierman Gallery, New York.
Acquired by the present owner from the above, 2002.

拍品专文

Aaron Henry Gorson was captivated by the industrial elements of urbanity, which provided the subject matter for some of his best known paintings of which Mill Along the River is a classic example. He arrived in Pittsburgh in 1903 to find a city at its height as a world manufacturing center. The landscape was riddled with coal, steel and iron mills, which the artist immediately gravitated towards, depicting them in a Whistlerian fashion until he left the city in 1921. As seen in Mill Along the River, these works are rarely mere documentations of the place, rather they are dramatic and painterly scenes, which are often punctuated with brilliant flashes of light and spurts of steam. Mill Along the River captures the powerful presence of industry not only in burgeoning Pittsburgh, but also in America in the first quarter of the nineteenth century.