Bernard Goldberg Fine Arts: The Collection
John Marin (1870-1953)

Weehawken Sequence

细节
John Marin (1870-1953)
Weehawken Sequence
oil on canvasboard
14 x 10 in. (35.6 x 25.4 cm.)
Painted circa 1916.
来源
The artist.
Estate of the above.
Mr. and Mrs. John Marin, Jr., New York.
Kennedy Galleries, Inc., New York.
The Oak Brook Bank Collection, Illinois.
Christie's, New York, 29 November 2000, lot 127.
Acquired by the present owner from the above.
出版
M. Helm, John Marin, Boston, Massachusetts, 1948, p. 9.
S. Reich, John Marin: A Stylistic Analysis and Catalogue Raisonné, pt. II, Tucson, Arizona, 1970, p. 432, no. 16.85, illustrated.

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拍品专文

"[John] Marin saw movement in his paintings not only as a sign of modernity, a means of capturing the quickening pace of life in the twentieth century. It was also for him a manifestation of the pulse and rhythm of life itself." (M.E. Ward, Movement: Marin, exhibition catalogue, New York, 2001, p. 7) The tempo of the evolving life in Manhattan and the city's role as center of Modernist thinking were keys to Marin's success early in his career. As evident in the present painting, Weehawken Sequence, Marin was a close observer of the shapes, spaces and rhythms present in a modern metropolis. The horizontal bands of saturated color, juxtaposed against the vigorous brushwork, create a heightened sense of movement and tension that underscore the overall harmony of man and nature that define Marin's most successful works.