Untitled (Still Life)
1938 (SOLD)
Oil on paper laid down on canvas
19 x 25 inches (48.3 x 63.3 cm)
Signed and dated lower left
Ex-collection:
The Artist
Pollock Krasner Foundation
Robert Miller Gallery, New York
Private collection
Exhibitions:
HMOFA Ed. Supp., 1983-85, all venues, no. CIII
CU, 1985
Rohor-West Museum, Manitowog, WI, Still Life, July 26-Sept. 6, 1987,
Provincetown Art Association, MA, The League at the Cape, Aug. 13-Sept. 15, 1993
Literature:
Ellen G. Landau, Lee Krasner: A Catalogue Raisonné, New York, 1995, cat. no. 38, p. 39, illustrated
About the Painting:
In Untitled (Still Life), “Krasner demonstrated how Hofmann’s theory of “push-pull” could be expressed with color. She left a lot of white paper showing around and between wedge-shaped areas of pure hue in an attempt to duplicate the “aerated” surfaces she admired in Matisse’s pre-Fauve paintings. Referencing Matisse’s Collioure pictures, she worked her colors so that they appear to expand and contract, metaphorizing three-dimensional space. In some of these oil still lifes, Krasner counterpointed identifiable objects with an armature of swinging horizontal and vertical lines. In most, however, she allowed color areas to work on their own. Rough suggestions of a receding tabletop can occasionally be read, but three-dimensionality is more often suggested through the push and pull of warm/cool tensions. Bottles, melons, and other still-life accoutrements are reduced to triangles and circles, or nonspecific mosaic-like dabs and patches of differentiated hues.”
Ellen G. Landau, Lee Krasner: A Catalogue Raisonné, New York, 1995, p.39