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#robert motherwell – @matthewsgallery on Tumblr
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Matthews Gallery

@matthewsgallery / matthewsgallery.tumblr.com

Santa Fe, New Mexico art gallery. We exhibit distinctive European and American masters, Santa Fe and Taos artists, American modernism and contemporary art by established artists.
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“All my works [consist] of a dialectic between the conscious (straight lines, designed shapes, weighed color, abstract language) and the unconscious (soft lines, obscured shapes, automatism) resolved into a synthesis."

On Robert Motherwell's 100th birthday (b. Jan 24, 1915), check out this Motherwell print that passed through Matthews Gallery and read a blog about it from our archives. 

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"Peggy Guggenheim who liked us said that she would put on a show of this new business. And so I went around explaining the theory of automatism because the only way you could have a movement was that it had some common principle."

Robert Motherwell (1915-1991) was born in Aberdeen, Washington, but the family soon moved south to combat the child's severe asthma attacks. He spent his early years soaking in the ultramarine blues and earthy ochres of Central California.

Motherwell studied literature, psychology and philosophy at Stanford University, developing a fascination with the French Symbolists. Postgraduate work at Harvard University further propelled him into a world where abstract explorations of emotion and identity replaced the traditional narrative.

During a trip across Europe in the late 1930s, Motherwell fell in love with modern art and decided to become a painter, much to the dismay of his father. After a months-long "cold war", they struck a deal: Motherwell would get his PhD in art history as a backup plan, and his father would support his painting aspirations thereafter with a small weekly stipend.

During his art history studies at Columbia University, Motherwell's teacher Meyer Schapiro introduced him to exiled European surrealist Roberto Matta. Matta and his circle, including Marcel Duchamp and Max Ernst, introduced Motherwell to the concept of automatism— the avoidance of conscious intention in art making.

Matta and Motherwell traveled across Mexico in 1941, where the latter produced his first known artworks, a series of travel sketches. On that journey, everything came together: the vivid palette of Motherwell's homeland, and ideas culled from symbolism, modernism, surrealism, and automatism.

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Motherwell completed the Africa suite in 1970, the same year he created his Basque and London suites. They were his first projects entirely devoted to silkscreens, and a divergence from the heavily layered nuances of his oil paintings. Here his black abstract forms stand crisply against their off-white backgrounds, although on closer inspection, their tumultuous edges still seem to weave in an out of focus.

“All my works [consist] of a dialectic between the conscious (straight lines, designed shapes, weighed color, abstract language) and the unconscious (soft lines, obscured shapes, automatism) resolved into a synthesis,” the artist wrote in 1944.

Motherwell first explored the concepts of automatism and the subconscious with a group of Parisian Surrealists, including Duchamp, Ernst and Masson, who had fled Europe during World War II.  Their ideas would help shape the spiritual side of abstract expressionism, a spontaneous, intuitive element that Motherwell carefully balanced with his more intellectual inclinations.

Motherwell’s connection to the Surrealists lends us a potential clue to the significance of the ‘Africa’ title. In his 1946 essay ‘Beyond the Aesthetics‘, Motherwell discusses the life of French Symbolist poet Arthur Rimbaud, who helped inspire Surrealism. In the final decades of his life Rimbaud quit writing and set off on an African expedition, a leap of faith that Motherwell compares to the Surrealists’ break from Dada and formation of a new movement:

Like Rimbaud before them, the Surrealists abandoned the aesthetic altogether; it takes a certain courage to leave poetry for Africa (as Rimbaud did, fh). They revealed their insight as essentially moral in never forgetting for a moment that most living is a process of conforming to an established order which is inhuman in its drives and consequences. Their hatred sustained them through all the humiliating situations in which the modern artist find himself, and led them to conceptions beyond the reach of more passive souls. For them true ‘poetry’ was freedom from mechanical social responses. No wonder they loved the work of children and the insane – if not the creatures themselves.

Perhaps Motherwell’s Africa suite represents a similar journey, a leap into the unknown that is a clear break from previous adventures. Just as Rimbaud abandoned an intellectual pursuit for one centered on travel and action, and as the Surrealists broke from the societal battles of the Dadaists to explore dreamscapes, so Motherwell’s stark Africa forms landed him in a new realm of image-making. Perhaps he sought to prove that even the most distinctly divided blacks and whites could possess endless shades of grey.

Read more about this artwork here

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