Blue and Red Abstraction

Date 1950
Technique Drawing or Watercolor
Price $2,500.00
Exhibitor Marc Chabot Fine Arts
Contact the Exhibitor 203-206-2141
marc@mcfinearts.com
Buy From / See At This Exhibitor's Site

Gouache and Ink, 1950,  7-3/4 x 10 , signed and dated in ink, on textured cream J Whatman Hand Made watermarked paper, a few tiny stray marks of paint in the large margins. Gertrude Barrer was a member of the group of painters in New York in the mid to late 1940s including Steve Wheeler, Ruth Lewin, Peter Busa and Howard Daum who came to be know as the "Indian Space" painters. The name derives from their embrace of the flattened space, conventionalized form and equality between of positive and negative space as design elements, all absorbed from study of Native American sources and art of the Northwest Coast instead of Europe. Will Barnet, whom Barrer studied with at the Art Student's League, also embraced these ideas in his own explorations of abstraction.  As she embraced, personalized, then transcended Indian Space concerns for all-over patterning and ambiguity between positive and negative form, Barrer infused her own hybrid imagery with elements of both organic and man made structure, and monumental and mythic themes. This is a classic image from 1950 which though small in format reveals Barrer's characteristic structures;  suggesting an epic scale.