|
![]() |
|||
|
||||
OverviewAn immigrant from a small Armenian village in eastern Turkey, Arshile Gorky (c. 1900-1948) made his way to the U.S. to become a painter in 1920. Having grown up haunted by memories of his alternately idyllic and terrifying childhood-his family fled the Turks' genocide of Armenians in 1915-he changed his name and created a new identity for himself in America. As an artist, Gorky bridged the generation of the surrealists and that of the abstract expressionists and was a very influential figure among the latter. His work was an inspiration to Willem de Kooning and Mark Rothko, among others. Matthew Spender illuminates this world as he tells the story of Gorky's life and career. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Matthew SpenderPublisher: University of California Press Imprint: University of California Press Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.771kg ISBN: 9780520225480ISBN 10: 0520225481 Pages: 440 Publication Date: 23 March 2001 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Out of stock ![]() The supplier is temporarily out of stock of this item. It will be ordered for you on backorder and shipped when it becomes available. Table of ContentsIllustrations Gorky's Family Tree Acknowledgments Preface 1 Khorkom 2 Van City 3 Yerevan 4 Watertown 5 Sullivan Street 6 Union Square 7 The Public Works of Art Project 8 The Federal Art Project 9 The Newark Airport Murals 10 Old and New Paths 11 The World's Fair 12 War 13 San Francisco 14 A Change of Direction 15 Crooked Run 16 Surrealists in New York 17 A Second Summer at Crooked Run 18 Roxbury 19 Two Disasters 20 Union Square 21 Sherman 22 Last Six Weeks Afterword Notes IndexReviews"""Only in America could an Armenian refugee who never set foot in France become the last great exponent of School of Paris painting and the first great exemplar of the postwar New York School of modernism. So this is an American story, and a classic immigrant's story, too -- one of dislocation and self-discovery, of the tension between inbred and acquired identities -- played out not in tenements or on Main Street but in the lofts and salons of the art world.""--Robert Storr, ""Washington Post Book World" A thoughtful, emotionally engaged biography of one of the most talented - and secretive - abstract painters of the 1940s. To research this book (at the outset, anyway) Spender had only to turn his own extended family; he married Gorky's eldest daughter, Maro, in 1967. But the task was a challenge: Gorky (1904 - 48) excelled in spinning myths and was incredibly closemouthed about his past, even with his second wife, Mougouch, and their children. The facts suggest a credible reason: Born Vostanig Adoian to a poor Armenian farmer in eastern Turkey, the boy fled his homeland with his mother and siblings when the Turks began massacring Armenians in 1915. They eventually made it to the US, arriving in the Armenian enclave of Watertown, Mass., in 1920. Vostanig changed his name to Arshile Gorky (probably lifting the surname from novelist Maxim Gorky) and began a career as an artist. Wildly talented and able to copy the style of everyone from Cezanne to Picasso, he found his way to New York in 1925. His elusiveness and occasionally abrasive intensity kept other artists at arm's length, however; only a few, including Willem de Kooning, remained lifelong friends. As his career progressed, this intensity slowly began to take an ever greater toll on Gorky's mental stability. Spender does not gloss over his subject's difficulties; he writes most powerfully, in fact, of Gorky's terrifying psychological demise and eventual suicide. The rest of the book, however, suffers from the author's prosaic narrative style; as smoldering a character as Gorky surely merits a biography with more passion and fire than this. Approaching the enigma of the man, Spender (Within Tuscany: Reflections on Time and Place, 1992) looks for literal meaning beneath the artist's metaphors; although he does a thoroughly credible job, Gorky remains elusive and mystifying. (Kirkus Reviews) Only in America could an Armenian refugee who never set foot in France become the last great exponent of School of Paris painting and the first great exemplar of the postwar New York School of modernism. So this is an American story, and a classic immigrant's story, too -- one of dislocation and self-discovery, of the tension between inbred and acquired identities -- played out not in tenements or on Main Street but in the lofts and salons of the art world. --Robert Storr, Washington Post Book World Author InformationMatthew Spender is a writer and sculptor. He married the eldest daughter of Arshile Gorky in 1968. His previous book, Within Tuscany, is a memoir about the Sienese countryside where they live. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |