| Inscapes:
Words and Images was a 1976 city-wide festival held in Washington,
D.C. to celebrate the collaboration of poetry and visual arts.
To commemorate the festival, the Smithsonian commissioned Guston
and poet Stanley Kunitz to create this collaborative work inspired
by and featuring one of Kunitz's poems.
The print is the only serigraph ever made by Guston, and was one
of the first pieces in his now-famous Neo-Expressionist series.
Conveying the artist's despair, it reveals a large disembodied head,
dominated by a single bulging eye contemplating the universe. Throughout
his 50-year career, he alternated between painting and drawing,
as he was acclaimed for his strong, metaphysical paintings with
unique cartoon-like characters.
Philip Guston (1913 - 1980, Montreal), was a leading painter of
the post-World War era know for his Abstract Expressionist works
that often conveyed frank social commentary. Guston was essentially
a self-taught artist, studying only briefly at Otis Art Institute
in Los Angeles. Between 1932 and 1940 he painted murals for the
WPA. He received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1947, and the Prix
de Rome and an American Academy of Arts and Letters grant, allowing
him to study Renaissance painting in Europe. In 1950 Guston, together
with Jackson Pollock, founded the New York School of Abstract
Expressionism. His work was shown at the Bienal de Sao Paulo in
1959, the Venice Biennale in 1960, and exhibitions at the Museum
of Modern Art. His work is in permanent collections, including
the Guggenheim Museum, the Whitney Museum of Art, the Museum of
Modern Art, and the Tate Gallery in London.
Special Information: 12-color serigraph, numbered
and signed edition of 100. Printed on Lenox 100% rag paper by
Chromacomp, Inc. Sold unframed and comes with a certificate of
authenticity from the Smithsonian.
Image Dimensions: 40 x 30 inches
Paper Dimensions: 44 x 33 inches
Produced by: Chromacomp, Inc.
Other works in the Smithsonian Art Collectors Program by
Philip Guston:
Inscapes: Words and Images,
1977 - Poster |