Untitled, George Morrison, 1977, Minneapolis Institute of Art: Prints and Drawingsrubbing in grey an
Untitled, George Morrison, 1977, Minneapolis Institute of Art: Prints and Drawingsrubbing in grey and brown of woodgrain patterns on small pieces of wood fit together to form a square; primarily rectangular forms, with two half-circle forms and large form at bottom with curving top Minnesota native George Morrison was a member of the Anishinaabe (Ojibwe) people of the Grand Portage Reservation. Early in his career, he was active in the New York School of Abstract Expressionism, a mid-20th-century movement of avant-garde artists who saw abstraction as the essential vehicle for conveying intense emotion and exploring spirituality and the unconscious through color, form, space, and gesture. Morrison later turned to nature and the earth for inspiration and subject matter, producing paintings, wood collages, drawings, rubbings, and prints that embodied the spiritual concerns of his Native American culture. Many of his later works feature highly abstracted landscapes with high horizon lines and a flattened perspectives, a signature motif that embodied Morrison’s spiritual and symbolic methodology. Though his sculptures and collages could be monumental in scale, Morrison often chose to produce modestly-sized works that could be completed quickly. Indeed, a number of these smaller works were part of his extended series of “surrealist landscapes,” dreamlike depictions of land and sky that resulted from automatic drawing techniques he adopted as a way to tap into the mind’s subconscious.Size: 9 ¼ × 8 ½ in. (23.5 × 21.59 cm) (sight) 16 × 15 3/16 × 7/8 in. (40.64 × 38.58 × 2.22 cm) (outer frame)Medium: Conté crayon and frottage on handmade paperhttps://collections.artsmia.org/art/126116/ -- source link
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