A vivid biomorphic style and uniquely tragic personal history
define Arshile Gorky as a major figure in twentieth-century
modernism. While often classified as late Surrealism
or as a precursor of Abstract Expressionism, his emotionally
charged abstract style holds a distinct place among the explorations
of the avant-garde.
Born in Armenia, Gorky emigrated to the United States as
teenager in 1920. He and his family left their native
land under duress after the genocide and massive displacement
of Armenians during the World War I. Gorky’s
mother starved to death as a result of their forced march—later,
her memory inspired a series of family portraits. Although
the upheaval of his early life profoundly shaped his art,
Gorky took pains to obscure his Armenian heritage. Born
Vosdanig Manoog Adoian, the artist abandoned his given name
for a more Russian-sounding pseudonym after coming to the
United States. To perpetuate the deception, he even
claimed to be a cousin of the writer Maxim Gorky. As
a young man, Gorky studied at the New School of Design in
Boston and, later, the Grand Central School of Art in New
York, where he taught from 1925 to 1931.
In the 1920s and 1930s Gorky embarked on a self-directed
effort to retrace the artistic revolutions of Cézanne
and Picasso. He had relatively little interest in Analytic
Cubism, but was particularly interested in Picasso’s
flat, richly painted, and deeply colored Synthetic Cubist
paintings of the 1920s. Gorky's acquaintance with Synthetic
Cubist work--specifically that by Picasso--came primarily
through his familiarity with paintings in museums and in
publications such as Cahiers d’Art, a leading
periodical that featured reproductions of works by both Braque
and Picasso.
During his first decade in the United States, Gorky befriended
Stuart Davis and John Graham, two artists who were also pursuing
Cubist motifs. Gorky, Graham, and Davis came to be
known as the “three musketeers.” Graham became
a particularly important influence on Gorky in the 1930s,
providing Gorky with stylistic and intellectual material
that would complement Gorky’s understanding of Cubism. Gorky
also developed a close relationship with Willem de Kooning
soon after the Dutch-born artist arrived in the United States
in 1926, and he helped introduce him other artists working
in New York.
In the mid to late 1930s, Gorky moved away from Cubism and
toward the looser, more emotional style he would explore
for the rest of his career. The Garden in Sochi series,
created from 1936 to 1942, marked an important new direction
for him, both artistically and personally. The series
was inspired by the Gorky family's garden in Khorkom, the
Armenian village where Gorky was born and spent his early
childhood. Biomorphic shapes reflect the strong influence
of Joan Miró on the artist during this period. The
colorful shapes scattered across the solid-colored ground
are generally understood to contain symbolic references to
Gorky’s life. These forms are rendered so abstract,
however, that explicit narrative readings of these works
are impossible.
Just as he reached artistic maturity in the mid-1940s, Gorky
was beset by series of tragedies: a studio fire that resulted
in the loss of much of his work, a diagnosis of throat cancer,
a car crash, and the breakup of his second marriage. He
committed suicide in 1948, still relatively unknown outside
art world circles. By 1951, when the Whitney Museum
of American Art mounted “Arshile Gorky: Memorial Exhibition,” Gorky’s
stature as an important modernist painter was secure.
References
Herrera, Hayden. Arshile Gorky: His Life and Work. New
York: Farrar, Strauss and Giroux, 2003).
Rand, Harry. Arshile Gorky: The Implications of
Symbols. Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1991).
© Copyright 2007 Hollis Taggart Galleries